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Frank Clair Stadium at Lansdowne Park, Ottawa, Canada

June 16th, 2006 / / Links: Google Earth, Google Maps, Yahoo! Maps, Virtual Earth / Nearest places
 

Frank Clair Stadium at Lansdowne Park (originally known simply as Lansdowne Park) is a Canadian football stadium located in Ottawa, Ontario, on the southern edge of The Glebe neighbourhood, where Bank Street crosses the Rideau Canal.

The stadium was the home of the Ottawa Rough Riders of the Canadian Football League from 1908 to 1996, when the team went defunct, and has been the home of the Ottawa Renegades from 2002 until 2005, and the operations were suspended for 2006.

The stadium, which was originally completed in 1908, as part of the Ottawa Exposition Grounds, seats 30,927 for football, consisting of a single-decked grandstand on one side of the field and a double-decked grandstand on the opposite side. The north side stands are located above the Ottawa Civic Centre. There is a rivalry during Renegades games between the two grandstands dubbed the "Northside" and the "Southside". "Northside sucks!" and "Southside sucks!" chants break out during football games regularily. The "Northside" has always been known as the more sophisticated side, while the "Southside" is a much rowdier side.

The stadium was renamed in 1993 to honour Frank Clair, coach and general manager for the Ottawa Rough Riders during the 1960s and 1970s.

The stadium is also home to University of Ottawa's Ottawa Gee Gees, and prior to the disbanding of the Ravens football programme at Carleton University in 1998, was the site of the Panda Bowl, when these rivals played each other with rowdy fans hurling insults across both sides of the stadium. At the final Panda Bowl game in 1997, the year following the departure of the Riders from Ottawa, the game (forfeited) was marred by an accident when drunken students fell from a grandstand.

In the late 1990's, the stadium was threatened with demolition when then-mayor Jim Watson led a drive by the municipal government to allow a private developer to reconfigure Lansdowne Park. The proposals submitted all called for residences to be built on the site of the football stadium. Massive public opposition and the realization that the end of the stadium would mean the end of hopes to return CFL football to the capital led the regional government to step in and end the scheme.

Frank Clair Stadium has played host to five Grey Cup games, the first occasion being in 1925 when Ottawa won its first Grey Cup title. It later held Grey Cup games in 1939, 1967, and 1988, before playing host to the 92nd Grey Cup in 2004, in which the Toronto Argonauts defeated the B.C. Lions to become the 2004 CFL Champions.

The stadium has also hosted concerts including The Rolling Stones, David Bowie, George Thorogood and Supertramp. During the winter months, a private company rents the field and places an inflated dome over the field area, renting the covered/heated surface for use by amateur sports teams.

(Source: Wikipedia)

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