By 2009, the school district designated the stadium a surplus property, although they had not decided whether to sell it. As recently as 2007, the school district examined options to redevelop all or part of the property, most likely as medium-density residential units. A local group, Friends of Civic Stadium, started a
grassroots campaign in support of restoring the historic venue while also attempting to find alternative tenants. With the future of the stadium in flux, it was one of ten entries on
Restore Oregon's
Most Endangered Places in Oregon 2011 list. In April 2015, the Eugene Civic Alliance raised $4.1 million to buy the stadium and 10 acres of surrounding property from the school district. Eugene Civic Alliance is a non-profit made up of community leaders, including
Lane United FC managing director Dave Galas, and the executive director of the Eugene youth sports organization Kidsports, former Ducks basketball player
Bev Smith. On June 29, 2015, Civic Stadium was destroyed by fire. Two days later, officials charged four pre-teen boys in connection with the fire, although the cause had not yet been determined conclusively. It was delisted from the National Register of Historic Places on March 8, 2016. File:Civic Stadium Fire Eugene Oregon.jpg|The stadium on fire File:Civic Stadium Grandstand After June 2015 Fire.JPG|Grandstand, shortly after the fire File:Civic Stadium Fire-5.jpg|Former grandstand and field, July 2015 ==New facility==