So in the end zones, do they cut out the outline of the MINNESOTA letters, plop in the gold letters, and stitch them in?
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The rolls are huge, there are giant totes of the rubber infill, It's pretty much useless to your average Joe. You might be able to cut a piece off for a door mat or something, but that rubber is so messy its not worth it. To the people thinking this can be put back together as a field for a high school; it would cost hundreds of thousands to do. You need a properly constructed base and everything would nee to be stitched back together, top dressed with rubber, and groomed. Plus its already been stomped on for a few years by the Gophers, MNUFC, and worst of all- the U of M marching band.
Synthetic field turf is not low maintenance. It needs to be groomed and top dressed with rubber on a regular basis. It has a lifespan of about 10 years, a quality constructed field costs around 1 Million. Its good for football and that's about it. Natural turf is better and cheaper playing surface 90% of the time. Getting those rubber bits in your eye is the worst!
I'm not saying you're wrong, but I'm not sure why they would have installed turf they knew was going to be in for two years that has a ten year life span without a plan on how to get it out in a reusable condition. AT&T Stadium has three artificial turfs they switch between based on events (not to mention removing it completely for certain events). They come out in 10 yard segments. Gillette (an outdoor stadium) also has multiple turfs (at least two - NFL and MLS) that they switch between. Why would the Gophers not have done a similar design when they knew they were replacing it with 80% of its usable life left?
As far as the base, etc., many high schools already have artificial turf, I'm sure this is in better shape than several of those schools. Others would potentially invest if the total bill was low enough (in other words, not paying for the actual turf might be enough to make it doable).
Nobody said it would be free for a school to convert over to this field. But some schools would still jump at the opportunity if the turf itself was free.
I'm not saying you're wrong, but I'm not sure why they would have installed turf they knew was going to be in for two years that has a ten year life span without a plan on how to get it out in a reusable condition. AT&T Stadium has three artificial turfs they switch between based on events (not to mention removing it completely for certain events). They come out in 10 yard segments. Gillette (an outdoor stadium) also has multiple turfs (at least two - NFL and MLS) that they switch between. Why would the Gophers not have done a similar design when they knew they were replacing it with 80% of its usable life left?
As far as the base, etc., many high schools already have artificial turf, I'm sure this is in better shape than several of those schools. Others would potentially invest if the total bill was low enough (in other words, not paying for the actual turf might be enough to make it doable).
Nobody said it would be free for a school to convert over to this field. But some schools would still jump at the opportunity if the turf itself was free.
Sorry to bring up a dead topic but we just finished setting up our bocce ball court using the removed TCF turf and are pretty excited. Working on adding end zones and a block M. It's in the middle of our biergarten for anyone in the Fergus Falls area this fall.
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Turf today is not the turf of yore. It would be cost prohibitive to carefully remove the 10” of rubber and sand that is between each blade just to save the “grass” part. Not worth the effort on a big scale. Cheaper to buy new and use out its full life.
Sorry to bring up a dead topic but we just finished setting up our bocce ball court using the removed TCF turf and are pretty excited. Working on adding end zones and a block M. It's in the middle of our biergarten for anyone in the Fergus Falls area this fall.
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