This, at least in some of the seats closest to the field. Honestly I wouldn't expect a large change in noise with this project. Obviously it's not finished, and some people were already claiming they could tell a difference last season, but I honestly couldn't tell a difference. The press box already occupied one side of the field and would have provided some backboard for the noise, we're effectively adding a structure on the other side and then later I believe the 3rd building. Maybe we'll see a bigger gain in noise once the 3rd piece is in place, but I doubt it. I think the aim of the project has always been to add classrooms/indoor seating to the venue so it can be used year round instead of several times a year.
A) Everybody from the guy who ran the architectural firm that laid out the plans to BK have gone on record stating that the changes in the stadium will make it 'louder' from the field level. My experience is that it is louder, not quite as warm in the early fall games, and not quite as cold in the later games. That is my more immediate concern. I can wear hearing protection. But the sauna like temperatures of the season opener, and frozen tundra experience of the late games being moderated a little bit, those would be good things!
B) I was a happy camper through this whole series of changes over the last half-dozen years or so, until the bean counter started talking about fair market value of the tickets, as a justification for a 100% increase in ticket price over two seasons. That is the biggest pile of swill I feel I have been fed in a long time for two reasons. That guy made it transparent that ND sees this as a business endeavor, not what I always thought it was, something greater, 'God, Country, Notre Dame.'
And of course the other point being is up through last season, every ticket that I purchased through the lottery had my name assigned to it, and I was responsible for it. If I had an extra ticket, I sold it at face value per the agreement I had with the University of Notre Dame. I know people that lost their lottery privileges as a result of ticket profiteering. So what's the deal this year?
With ND's own official logic, expressed in more than one press release, everyone should work to make sure that ass that sits in a given seat pays fair market value for that experience! (Just like some of you pointed out! Good for you!)
I liked it and ND better when they kept prices reasonable so more people, less economically advantaged could see some games.