Soldier Field 

1410 South Museum Campus Drive, Chicago IL, 60605 Find on Google Maps (opens in a new tab)

Chicago Building ID: 103669

⚠️ This building did not report data in 2022, this data is from 2015, the latest year reported

Building Info

Square Footage
1,548,634 sqft
11x median
139,707 sqft
Built
1924
Primary Property Type
Stadium (Open)
Community Area
Near South Side
Owner
Not Tagged

Emissions & Energy Information for 2015

Greenhouse Gas Intensity
14.7 kg CO2e / sqft
2.3x median
6.4 kg CO2e / sqft
Total Greenhouse Gas Emissions
22,703 tons CO2e
26x median
885.8 tons CO2e

Years Reported 1/8 F

  • 2015 data reported

    2015

  • 2016 data not reported

    2016

  • 2017 data not reported

    2017

  • 2018 data not reported

    2018

  • 2019 data not reported

    2019

  • 2020 data not reported

    2020

  • 2021 data not reported

    2021

  • 2022 data not reported

    2022

Energy Breakdown

Natural Gas Use
16,899,451 kBtu
Est. Gas Bill: $201,000 for 2015**
2.9x median
5,818,399.6 kBtu
Electricity Use
108,529,613 kBtu
Est. Electric Bill: $4,549,000 for 2015**
29x median
3,796,376.7 kBtu

Energy Mix

Total Energy Use: 125,429,064 kBTU

View Extra Technical Info
Source Energy Usage Intensity
231.5 kBtu / sqft
1.8x median
132.2 kBtu / sqft
Site Energy Usage Intensity
81 kBtu / sqft
1.0x median
78.4 kBtu / sqft

Full Historical Data Table

Year Floor Area sqft GHG Intensity kg CO2e / sqft GHG Emissions metric tons CO2e Source EUI kBTU / sqft Electricity Use kBTU Natural Gas Use kBTU
2015 1,548,634 14.722,703231.5108,529,61316,899,451

* Note on Rankings: Rankings and medians are among included buildings, which are those who reported under the Chicago Energy Benchmarking Ordinance for the year 2022, which only applies to buildings over 50,000 square feet.

** Note on Bill Estimates: Estimates for gas and electric bills are based on average electric and gas retail prices for Chicago in 2021 and are rounded. We expect large buildings would negotiate lower rates with utilities, but these estimates serve as an upper bound of cost and help understand the volume of energy a building is used by comparing it to your own energy bills! See our Chicago Gas & Electric Costs Source (opens in a new tab) for the original statistics.

Data Source: Chicago Energy Benchmarking Data (opens in a new tab)

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