Cincinnati Open Renovation Serves Up Lessons in Grounds, Operations and Security
A $260 million renovation project greatly expanded the tennis venue to accommodate more guests and tournaments.
By Joel Williams, Contributing Writer
Key Takeaways:
- The Cincinnati Open’s $260 million renovation demonstrates that successful facility projects are driven as much by operational planning — such as crowd flow, landscaping, security and maintenance — as by architectural design.
- Real-time data, integrated technology and coordinated operations enable facility teams to optimize staffing, manage crowds, enhance security and maintain a seamless guest experience during large-scale events.
- Long-term event success depends on continuous maintenance and operational discipline, with proactive grounds care, cleaning and infrastructure management ensuring the venue delivers a consistent, high-quality experience from the first day through the last.
For facility maintenance professionals, the most interesting part of a major sports venue renovation is often operational rather than architectural: how crowd flow, landscape durability, security, staffing, food service, and guest amenities work together under event pressure.
That makes the Cincinnati Open’s $260 million transformation of the Lindner Family Tennis Center in Mason, Ohio, a useful case study for facility managers, grounds professionals, and building engineers.
Held Aug. 8-23, the Cincinnati Open brings 96 players from the men’s and women’s tennis tours together in front of more than 285,000 fans for one of the most prestigious stops during the sport’s summer season ahead of the year’s final Grand Slam, the US Open. The reimagined campus was designed to support a larger, more ambitious tournament while preserving the intimacy and comfort that have long defined the event.
“Throughout the design process, we were very intentional to enhance what fans have historically loved about the tournament,” explains Jansen Dell, chief operating officer of the Cincinnati Open.
For fans, the goal was a more welcoming venue. For operations teams, that experience depends on a larger campus working smoothly behind the scenes.
Designing for Experience and Operations
According to Dell, the tennis center project began with a basic operational reality: doubling the size of the tournament required doubling the size of the site. Dell explains that the expansion included adding 14 additional tennis courts, a new player clubhouse, fan lawns, and an indoor court building.
The design challenge was to add scale without sacrificing the character fans expected.
“Fans that were at the campus pre-renovation will immediately notice the expansion,” he says. “But the feeling that they have should be one of familiarity at the same time.”
Dell describes the guiding concept as “tennis in a park.” Instead of designing a tennis facility and decorating with landscaping, the team initially designed a park and incorporated the sport into it. That approach shaped crowd flow, gathering areas, shade, sightlines, and the daily grounds work required to keep the site event-ready.
Grounds as an Experience Driver
The renovation added trees, flowers, shrubs, grasses, lawns and shaded areas, giving the campus a softer feel. Those features are not just decorative, but also allow fans to feel welcomed and relaxed.
That comfort matters because the tournament is not a quick in-and-out event, with many averaging a seven-hour stay, Dell says. During that time, fans may move among stadiums, practice courts, food areas, merchandise, shaded lawns and gathering spaces.
For the grounds team, landscape appearance and guest satisfaction are closely linked. A clean, green campus can make a long day feel easier and reinforce the event’s brand.
“For the grounds team, keeping flowers, trees, shrubs and grasses fresh throughout the two weeks of the event is certainly a challenge,” admits Dell. “We work closely with our landscaping partners and spend several pre-dawn hours each day watering, trimming, and repairing to keep everything looking as good as it did on the first day.”
For any public-facing facility, the lesson is clear: landscapes must be designed for beauty but maintained for traffic, weather, recovery time, and rapid repair. During a major event, the grounds crew is not just maintaining plants; it is maintaining the guest impression.
Larger Footprint, Better Crowd Distribution
The renovation doubled the venue’s size, but capacity increased more modestly.
“While the venue doubled in size, our capacity saw a much more modest increase,” says Dell. That difference gives the larger site an operational advantage.
“As a result, on many days crowds are dispersed over a greater area,” explains Dell. “While there is more space to maintain, that spread helps prevent the services in any one area from getting overwhelmed.” Restrooms, concessions, waste collection, circulation routes and seating areas all benefit when demand is distributed.
Using Data to Support Real-Time Decisions
The renovation also improved the team’s ability to see how the venue is functioning in real time.
“Monitoring the flow of people into and around the campus is invaluable information that helps inform decisions on best use of the venue’s facilities, staffing, and resources,” Dell says.
Parking is one of the clearest examples because the tournament operates with two ticketed sessions each day that overlap.
“Understanding the attrition rate of the day session attendees is crucial to accommodating the night session crowd,” Dell says.
That information can help the operations team adjust staffing, traffic routing, and guest communications before pressure points become visible problems.
“Every year, new technology affords better and deeper information that allows us to adjust operations to maximize performance,” Dell says. For building engineers and facility managers, the larger lesson is the value of connecting operational data to daily decisions in a venue where weather, schedules, food lines, and arrival patterns are always changing.
Security That Supports the Guest Experience
Security was another major focus of the renovated campus.
“We used the expansion as an opportunity to enhance our campus technology systems,” Dell explains. “This includes better connectivity, more cameras, access-control doors, integrated ticketing, and an integrated command center.”
Such visitor management systems support a balance every large venue must manage: keeping public areas easy to navigate while protecting restricted zones.
That balance is important for sports and entertainment venues. Security measures need to be effective, but they cannot make the site feel hostile or difficult to navigate. Dell says the enhanced systems allow the operations team to maintain an easier flow for the public while also keeping player areas and back-of-house operations secure.
An integrated command center helps bring security, ticketing, crowd flow and facility operations together in real time. Cameras, access controls, integrated ticketing, and better connectivity help protect sensitive areas, smooth entry and movement, and give staff better visibility across the site.
Player Facilities Are Part of the Operation
The renovation also significantly upgraded player-facing areas. This highlights a broader principle: fans may be the most visible users, but players, staff, media, vendors and sponsors all rely on the facility in different ways.
“The players have seen their facilities significantly expanded and upgraded,” observes Dell. “The locker rooms, lounges, recovery areas, warm-up and gym spaces, and the player dining room were all brand new in 2025 and designed with hospitality in mind.”
While those spaces may be out of public view, they are central to the success of a world-class tournament. For elite athletes and their teams, recovery, training, dining and private support areas affect the overall event experience.
Player dining was a particular improvement. “The food experience was exceptionally well received, with a new, robust kitchen allowing our culinary team to offer a varied menu for the players and their support teams,” reveals Dell. “Whether a player is preparing for a match or relaxing after training, we wanted them to feel comfortable and at home.”
Keeping the Campus Event-Ready
A clean and vibrant site is part of the Cincinnati Open brand, states Dell. “We are very excited to host the number of people we do on site every day,” he says. “But large crowds can also create challenges. A clean and vibrant site is a hallmark of the Cincinnati Open brand.”
Large crowds create wear. Trash accumulates. Landscaped areas need attention. High-traffic zones require constant inspection. The work must happen without getting in the way of the event itself. “We spend a lot of time planning to efficiently keep the site clean and organized without interrupting the overall experience,” adds Dell.
The best maintenance work often goes unnoticed. Fans see a clean campus, not the coordination behind it. They see fresh landscaping, not the early-morning watering and repairs.
“You never know who is coming to the tournament for the first time, so it is important to keep the site looking its best on the last day, as it is from day one,” Dell says.
Event readiness is not a one-time checklist completed before gates open; it is a continuous operating discipline that runs from pre-event preparation through the final guest departure. For Dell and his team, the work continues year-round as the site is now also home to the Cincinnati Open Sporting Club, which opened in March 2026. The Sporting Club offers tennis, pickleball and padel memberships, a Junior Academy, a public restaurant, flexible event space and golf and tennis shops, keeping the campus active well beyond the tournament.
Lessons for Other Facilities
The Cincinnati Open project elevated the campus’s look and feel, but it also strengthened the systems that allow the venue to operate under pressure. For Dell, any successful renovation starts with a deep understanding of operations.
“If you know how a site will function, you can be intentional with its layout,” he says. “With that foundation, you can begin the design process with confidence.”
The reimagined Lindner Family Tennis Center shows that world-class fan and player experiences depend on more than premium spaces and new amenities. As Dell points out, it took “intentionality” and “relentless attention to detail” to design a site that is aesthetically beautiful while elevating the fan and player experience. For facility teams, that same attention to detail continues every day the venue is open, from the first match to the final point.
Joel Williams is a freelance writer based in Frankfort, Illinois.
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