The Titans’ new enclosed stadium remains on schedule for a February 2027 completion, with major interior spaces, locker room work, and family areas already taking shape.
With construction moving steadily, the Titans are turning a long-term stadium vision into a modern, enclosed home built for players and families alike.
The Titans opened the doors for reporters this week and showed real progress on the new Nissan Stadium project, which broke ground in February and continues to move toward its planned finish.
Inside the building, the Titans are already carving out the kind of spaces that matter on game day and every day. Kellen DeCoursey, the Titans’ project manager, said the stadium will include dedicated offense meeting rooms and defense meeting rooms, giving the team a more functional football environment than the current setup.
The locker room area also looks far more complete now. Metal walls are in place, and the space is designed for 68 fixed lockers, along with showers, a trainers’ area and equipment storage.
That upgrade matters because the new building is expected to deliver about 50% more space than the Titans currently have in the stadium that opened in 1999. For a franchise that has lived with the limits of its old home, the difference should be obvious from the moment players walk in.
More room, more comfort, more modern football
The Titans have also built in a larger area for players’ families and children, giving them more room than what exists in the current stadium. Game days can stretch long, and the team has made it clear that family support is part of the plan.
Along with that, the Titans will offer nanny services during games, another sign that the new enclosed stadium is being designed with the full player experience in mind. The project goes beyond football operations and reaches into the daily reality of life around the team.
Cost is part of the story too. The new stadium comes with a $2.1 billion price tag, including $1.2 billion in combined state and local bonds. Even with that figure, the project still represents a major step up in space and function for the Titans.
The Titans’ current stadium has stood since 1999, and this new build is meant to reset the standard. The enclosed design gives the franchise a more modern home, one that better matches the demands of today’s NFL and the expectations that come with it.
What stood out most from the tour is how much of the stadium already feels real rather than theoretical. The Titans are no longer talking only about plans and drawings. They are showing rooms, walls, and working areas that point directly toward the future.
If the schedule holds, February 2027 will mark a major milestone for the Titans and for Nashville. The new enclosed stadium is not just rising fast; it is taking clear shape as a bigger, smarter, and more complete football venue.