Tuesday was a day to make purple and gold history, and Bill Keech wasn't going to miss out.
So hours before dawn, the lifelong Vikings fan from Le Center, Minn., pulled on his long johns and favorite team jersey and hit the road with his son, daughter and daughter's boyfriend for the 80-minute drive north to the Metrodome.
By the time Keech reached downtown Minneapolis, he was first in line for one of about 100 freebie tickets allowing a front-row seat at the 10 a.m. ceremonial groundbreaking for his team's bold and glassy $1 billion stadium.
"Took a day of vacation," the 51-year-old welder said as he shivered in the raw chill of a damp morning. "It's a once-in-a-lifetime chance to be here, and I made it."
Keech got his ticket, and then some.
After VIPs from Gov. Mark Dayton to Vikings running back Adrian Peterson shoveled the first scoops of ceremonial dirt from the Dome's back parking lot, Keech and other fans got a chance to pick up a gold shovel and fling some earth, too.
"Awesome," Keech said afterward, sporting a broad grin.
A year and a half after lawmakers signed off on $498 million in public financing for the project, construction crews finally broke ground, signaling the start of an intense push to erect a multipurpose stadium that will replace the Dome and reshape the downtown skyline for a generation to come.