In my defence,
I was left unsupervised
Mac Rating: 5.00 | Votes: 1 | Date: 03/07/2026 00:33:00

Detroit's soccer club is building the city's only privately financed stadium. AlumniFi Field, rising at 2401 20th Street on the former Southwest Detroit Hospital site between Corktown and Mexicantown, will be the 15,000-seat home of Detroit City FC - the supporter-built USL Championship club whose famous Northern Guard faithful have packed Hamtramck's Keyworth Stadium since 2016. The club bought the abandoned hospital land in 2024, tapped stadium specialists HOK for the design and Barton Malow to build it, and secured naming rights from digital banking brand AlumniFi, its long-time front-of-kit sponsor. The design chases the great football grounds of Europe rather than American multi-purpose convention: natural grass, three permanent canopied grandstands tight to the pitch, fourteen suites, a 1,000-person Gold Club and a 320-person Tunnel Club that players walk through on their way to the field. The roughly 150-million-dollar project anchors a broader mixed-use development with housing, commercial space and parking, and the venue is planned to host concerts and community programming alongside the soccer. The timeline has stretched once - from a 2027 debut to spring 2028, with groundbreaking ceremonies in mid-2026 and the club playing 2027 at Keyworth - but the demand signal is unambiguous: 6,000 season-ticket deposits were down before a spade of earth turned, and the preview center at the Mercado in Mexicantown, complete with a 3D model and replica suite, runs steady tours. When the gates open, Detroit City FC gets what its support long ago earned: a purpose-built home in the city itself. The stadium completes one of American soccer's best origin stories: founded in 2012 as a supporter-owned fourth-division side playing at a high-school field, Detroit City FC built crowds that outdrew professional clubs, crowdfunded the renovation of Keyworth Stadium, turned professional, and now finances a top-flight-quality ground from its own balance sheet. The Corktown-Mexicantown site keeps the club rooted in the neighbourhoods that built it, with Michigan Avenue's corridor and the Mercado preview center binding the project to its base while construction runs.

Edit Description

Ratings (1)

Rating:
5.00

User Ratings


Your Rating

CHARACTERS left: 2000

Comments

CHARACTERS left: 2000