First they lifted ever-so-slightly up. Then came the beeping. And for the next five minutes, the five glass doors on U.S. Bank Stadium's western wall swung slowly open.
Friday's media event was the first public opening of the pivoting doors, the largest of which is 95 feet high and 55 feet wide. The doors descend incrementally in height from left to right.
The Minnesota Vikings will play their first game at the stadium at noon Sunday. On Friday, they practiced on the field for the first time. Then the media got a tour of the Vikings Voyage, an interactive space for fans to see memorabilia and test their running, hitting and passing capabilities through virtual reality, then pose on a bench amid the Purple People Eaters.
As the heavy-on-the-hype video near the entrance says, the voyage is a place to "bring people together to experience the passion of the Vikings" because "we are all Vikings" and "the fair weather fans? They flew south for the winter. Forever."
In the entry to the voyage exhibit, fans ascend purple stairs under 1,000 shiny silver footballs suspended from the ceiling. The footballs commemorate each of retired wide receiver and Hall-of-Famer Cris Carter's catches.
Among the pieces on exhibit: Former coach Bud Grant's headset, old and new uniforms and the original drawing in 1961 of the team logo by Karl Hubenthal, a cartoonist for the Los Angeles Herald-Examiner. In an attached note, Hubenthal wrote that the colors purple and gold were the choice of the team's general manager Bert Rose, a fan of the University of Washington Huskies.
As the voyage opened Friday, 9-year-old Maddux Shockman of Berlin, N.D., became the first to strap on a helmet and try to "catch" a touchdown through virtual reality. He jumped up and down, then lifted his arms and stood on his tiptoes, saying, "Oh, awesome."
He dropped one pass, caught another and pronounced the experience "sweet." He told his mom, a season-ticket holder who held a bag of purchases from the adjacent team store, "You could see everything; it was so real."