<P> On April 18, 2000, the team revealed plans for the new stadium in Foxborough . It was announced as a 68,000 - seat stadium at a cost of $325 million, with the entire cost privately funded . Boston is thus the only city in professional sports in which all facilities are privately owned and operated . The Patriots own Gillette Stadium, the Red Sox own Fenway Park, and TD Garden is owned by Delaware North (the owner of the Bruins) (the Celtics rent the TD Garden from Delaware North). </P> <P> Concurrently announced was a new road to access the stadium from U.S. Route 1, and an additional 3,000 parking spaces to accommodate the increased number of fans . </P> <P> The stadium was designed by HOK Sport (now Populous). Kraft wanted it modeled on M&T Bank Stadium which had opened in Baltimore, Maryland in 1998 . Kraft insisted on it having a "front door" with a Disneyland - like entrance . Populous went through 200 designs before coming up with one that Kraft liked . The entrance includes a lighthouse (which was originally designed to shoot a light 2 miles (3.2 km) high) and a bridge modeled on Boston's Longfellow Bridge . The lighthouse and bridge are now featured on the stadium's logo . </P> <P> For the first eight years of its existence the stadium used a video display, with a smaller LED scoreboard just beneath it, at each end of the field . The south side also had a large LED scoreboard in addition to the smaller one . In 2010, the stadium installed two new high definition Daktronics video displays to replace the entire previous setup at both ends . At the time of their construction, the larger screen, at 41.5 feet tall and 164 feet wide (12.6 mx 50.0 m), was the second - largest video monitor in any NFL stadium; only AT&T Stadium had a larger one . </P>

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