How to buy Titans seats, memorabilia, and turf from old Nissan Stadium ahead of demolition, with proceeds benefiting charity

By admin — In News — July 6, 2026

06

Jul
2026

   ​Since the announcement of the new Nissan Stadium, Titans fans have repeatedly asked if anything from the old venue will be kept. That question is now becoming a reality: the Tennessee Titans will allow fans to purchase pieces of the old Nissan Stadium before it is demolished. With only 10 games left at the current stadium before demolition begins in early 2027, the team announced plans to sell seats, signage, memorabilia, and turf from the existing building through an online sale later this summer. Proceeds will benefit the Titans Foundation, and fans can sign up now to be notified when the website launches.
What’s being sold
The question I’ve heard most from fans since construction on the new stadium began is whether items from the old stadium will be available. Can we buy seats? Are there keepsakes? Until now, there hadn’t been an answer. Now there is. Titans manager of communications and corporate affairs Tessa Sayers confirmed the plan: “We will formally launch a website later this summer where fans can purchase seats and special memorabilia.” The Titans are still inventorying what can be salvaged from inside the stadium. Because the current structure sits less than 100 feet from the outer wall of the new Nissan Stadium, a traditional demolition isn’t feasible. The building will have to be dismantled by hand and mechanically, piece by piece, in a careful deconstruction process. That approach will take longer, but it increases the chances that more items survive the teardown and will be available for fans.
What fans can’t buy
A key detail about seats: if you’re hoping to buy your exact old seat from your specific section and row, that won’t be possible. That’s the No. 1 question I’ve received, and the answer is no. The logistics of pairing individual seats with individual buyers simply aren’t workable. The team wants to dismantle the venue as quickly as possible after the farewell tour ends, and the time constraints and structural realities of deconstruction make that level of specificity impractical. You’ll be able to buy a seat, but not your exact seat.
Where the rest of the stadium goes
A large portion of the old stadium’s infrastructure is already accounted for. The video board, for instance, could be dismantled for spare parts and distributed to other major venues around the world. Video board technology has advanced to the point where spare parts for boards of that era are scarce and costly, making them highly marketable. Industrial equipment like boilers and HVAC units will be sold or donated to organizations that can put them to use, with the Titans aiming to maximize value and utility from the teardown.  

Content Source: Yahoo News

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