By the early 1990s,
Washington Redskins owner
Jack Kent Cooke sought to replace
RFK Stadium as the team's stadium. Cooke considered a site next to
Laurel Park Racecourse along
Whiskey Bottom and Brock Bridge roads, but lack of parking and public support prompted him to choose to build instead on Wilson Dairy Farm in
Landover, Maryland, within the
census-designated place of
Summerfield. A special exit, Exit 16 (initially Arena Drive, later renamed Medical Center Drive), was built from
Interstate 495, also known as the Capital Beltway. Cooke named the site Raljon after his sons Ralph and John, registering it with the
United States Postal Service for the stadium's
ZIP Code. Cooke died months before the opening of the new stadium, which his sons named Jack Kent Cooke Stadium. It opened on September 14, 1997, hosting a game against the
Arizona Cardinals.
Daniel Snyder bought the team and stadium from Cooke's estate in May 1999, briefly renaming it Redskins Stadium before selling
naming rights to
FedEx for 27 years at an average of $7.6 million per year. The stadium was renamed FedExField on November 21, 1999. The Raljon dateline requirements and placename were phased out by Snyder by the start of the
1999 season. From 2002 to 2010, the Redskins led the NFL in home attendance but demand declined thereafter. In the early 2010s, 14,000 seats were removed from the upper deck. Another 4,000 seats had been removed by 2015, with a capacity of 62,000 in 2022. 1,500 seats were re-added in 2025 for a total capacity of 64,000. In July 2023, Snyder sold the team and stadium to a group headed by
Josh Harris for $6.05 billion. The following year, Harris's company
Harris Blitzer Sports & Entertainment (HBSE) took over operating non-NFL events at the stadium. In February 2024, FedEx announced that it had opted out of its
naming rights contract before its expiration in 2026. The stadium was temporarily renamed Commanders Field until a sponsorship with
Northwest Federal Credit Union was announced to rename it Northwest Stadium on August 27, 2024. In 2025, the Commanders and D.C. mayor
Muriel Bowser announced plans to build a
new stadium at the former site of
RFK Stadium in Washington, D.C. to house the team by 2030. ==Design==