Who will clean up when the Browns are gone?

Who will clean up when the Browns are gone?
Dawgs By Nature Dawgs By Nature

The City of Cleveland owns the current stadium. So if they decide to tear it down, who will pay the cost?

The Cleveland Browns will open training camp this weekend as they prepare for the upcoming 2025 NFL season.

While the players and coaches stay busy with drills and meetings, ownership will continue its inevitable march toward a domed stadium in the Cleveland suburb of Brook Park.

The funding appears to be in place, the appropriate land has been purchased, and before long, shovels, bulldozers, cranes, and workers will fill the site with activity.

Cleveland still has four seasons to go at their current home, Huntington Bank Field on the shores of Lake Erie, as they need to be sure to play out their lease so as not to run afoul of the state’s so-called Modell Law.

But once the final game is played in 2028 and the Browns turn out the lights, the question is, what will become of Huntington Bank Field?

Proponents of the domed stadium plan have touted the overall awesomeness of it, with particular emphasis given to all the great events that the city, well region, will now be able to host. Concerts by Taylor Swift or Beyoncé, monster truck rallies, college basketball tournaments, World Cup football matches, pro ‘rasslin events, the list is endless!

That all does sound exciting, especially since we’ve all been missing out on such things, given that there is apparently not a venue currently available in Cleveland to accommodate the large crowds these events attract.

Which brings us back to Huntington Bank Field.

One of the longstanding arguments about the current home of the Browns is that it is underutilized. Eight regular-season home games and one or two preseason games from the Browns, the occasional concert from Journey or AC/DC, and a U.S. Men’s Soccer Team appearance now and again. Basically, it just sits there taking up space, according to those who have grown tired of the facility.

If that is true, then the City of Cleveland, which owns the stadium, will have to do something once the Browns have loaded up and headed to Brook Park.

Possibly the best plan would be to tear it down and develop the site to allow public access to Lake Erie. Maybe a park, a beach, a boardwalk, something fun and that everyone, young and old, rich or poor, can freely use.

While no mayor wants to be the one who “let the Browns leave Cleveland,” being the mayor who finally develops the lakefront into something positive that everyone can enjoy would look pretty nice on the résumé of Cleveland Mayor Justin Bibb. And as luck would have it, earlier today, the city put out a call to developers to start working up some ideas for the site, according to the NEO-Trans blog.

The problem is that the stadium is not going to demolish itself, and tearing it down, cleaning it up, and developing the site is not going to be free.

So, who...