

The seats in the lower level on the north side of the stadium were retractable allowing the field to be configured for baseball. When the stadium was built for the Dolphins, Joe Robbie insisted on a rectangular grandstand layout that was wider than needed for football, believing that baseball would one day come to Miami. The following year MLB awarded Miami a team, the Florida Marlins, who began playing in 1993. In 1990, in an effort to bring MLB baseball to Florida, Wayne Huizenga purchased 50% of Joe Robbie Stadium. Numerous circular ramps and escalators made accessing every seat a breeze and two video/scoreboards boards were located above the rim of the upper deck of each end zone.
#Pro player stadium logo upgrade
Joe Robbie Stadium was a major upgrade from the Orange Bowl with 75,000 orange and teal seats that enclosed the field. Originally named Joe Robbie Stadium, the Miami Dolphins played their first game at the stadium on August 16, 1987.

For decades football has been a part of the Miami landscape as the city is the home of the Dolphins (NFL), Hurricanes (NCAA) and has hosted countless Super Bowls and NCAA football championship games.
