The Pittsburgh Steelers have wrapped up a significant change at Acrisure Stadium, finishing the installation of a new playing surface ahead of the 2026 season.
Precision Turf said on X that the work is done, with Tahoma 31 Bermudagrass now in place at the stadium. The new field comes after Acrisure Stadium’s playing surface drew the worst grade in the league “by a wide margin” in the latest NFLPA report cards, according to ESPN’s Kalyn Kahler.
Art Rooney explained the switch during the NFL Owners Meetings in late March, when he laid out why the Steelers decided to move to Tahoma 31 Bermudagrass and how the process would unfold.
“The fields actually will be planted at a sod farm,” Rooney said, per Steelers.com. “So, we won’t get the new field until sometime in August.
But as we’ve talked about, it’ll be a new surface, a new kind of grass mixture. And look forward to seeing how it works.
“We chose to make the change. It wasn’t mandated by the league. It’s been in use in some other stadiums around the country and seems to be having success, so we decided to make the change.”
The field upgrade is part of a broader round of work at Acrisure Stadium. Last October, the Sports and Exhibition Authority in Pittsburgh approved more than $6 million for the first stage of seat replacements, and that money will cover more than 22,000 seats. By 2029, more than 58,000 seats are expected to be replaced under a $17 million plan.
Rooney also said new black seats have been added to help cut through the stadium’s “sea of gold.”
“As we were making changes to the seating, the sea of gold sometimes gets overwhelming,” Rooney said. “So, we did add a little black and gold in there this time around.”
With Pittsburgh set to host the 2026 NFL Draft, the upgrades at Acrisure Stadium have taken on added importance. The lease at the stadium expires after the 2030 season, so the Steelers will eventually have to make a decision about what comes next.
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