Nearly 20,000 fans converged on St. Paul's new Allianz Field on Saturday for its inaugural pro soccer game, oblivious to a raw wind and eager to celebrate their Loons in a home they can finally call their own.
"I'm positively elated," said Casey Giltner, snapping photos of the manicured emerald grass hours before the game. "It's so much cooler inside than I thought it would be. It feels tight, like you're right on top of the field."
Giltner and his wife, Brittany Bybee, of northeast Minneapolis, were among the crowd that started arriving around noon for a loud pregame party in and around the new stadium. They described their trip to St. Paul on the Green Line from downtown Minneapolis as "super smooth," leaving them to focus on what Giltner called "the sport of the people."
Transportation pros are analyzing the gameday traffic patterns around Allianz Field, a $250 million privately funded stadium wedged into a Midway neighborhood on Interstate 94 that is already congested.
While a few fans lamented the lack of parking, most said their gameday trek went off without a hitch. They rode buses and light rail, took shuttle buses from the State Fairground parking lots, walked and used Uber.
The transportation management plan the city of St. Paul issued last month projected that about 40% of fans would take the Green Line or bus on game days.
Although Snelling Avenue was jammed, overall, there appeared to be few major pregame traffic mishaps.
Some who drove parked in the few nearby garages; others took their chances. Lori and Molatlhwa Tschosa drove in from Blaine and, when asked where they parked, pointed east and said: "Way down that way!"