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What's The Cost For Branding Bridges, Snowplows, And High Schools?
By Skylar Bergl
|September 12, 2012
Sporting venues with corporate names are near ubiquitous--stay strong, Fenway Park!--because those naming rights can net a fortune. One of the largest deals, for the New York Giants and Jets' MetLife Stadium, was $400 million over 25 years. Now cash-strapped cities want in. Some recent deals:
BP Pedestrian Bridge
ChicagoDowntown Chicago's Millennium Park is home to the BP Pedestrian Bridge. The naming rights to the Frank Gehry-designed winding silver structure cost British Petroleum $5 million.
Cargill snowplows
IndianapolisWhen it snows in Indy, Cargill's name comes marching to the rescue. The company provided the city with 125 tons of salt and five Ford F-250 trucks bearing the name Indy Snow Force Powered by Cargill.
CMT high school
Nashville, TennesseeFor in-kind donations and time valued at $100,000 in 2012 and $50,000 every year following, Country Music Television bought the rights to McGavock High School’s communication center, now known as the CMT Academy of Digital Design and Communication.
Can't afford a bridge? How about...
Individuals looking to boost their names on the cheap are in luck: Naming rights for bathrooms--and even individual stalls--are up for grabs at institutions including Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania.
Illustration by Byron Eggenschwiler
