With "billions," hopefully, the benefactor will want to do it up right and make it state of the art from the beginning and fold in some forward thinking principles (allowances for future technology) into the design as well as incorporating an element of aesthetics to it. Here are my votes for inspiration for some possible design elements: (red brick with white columns instead...the acoustics would reverberate nicely off the wall of the FOC in a set up similar to this = Loud)
But he believed there were enough football-playing evangelical Christians out there who would love the chance to play there. He noted that Notre Dame and Brigham Young University had both managed to field top football teams, despite their religious affiliations.
Also, as a side note: if LU is insistent on holding to some of the cultural absolutes of the way (i.e. hair code, movie & music protocols, etc.) then the BYU model is going to be the model closest to what LU's student code policy is.
Notre Dame, while Catholic in nature, mirrors a secular school student life-wise (they even have something like a "Department of Alcohol Responsibility" on campus) so Notre Dame has a less difficult time recruiting then say a BYU or LU, even though it has a religious affiliation.
Notre Dame also has the allure of the hallowed tradition that is Notre Dame Football. Now, that's not to say that LU can't create a hallowed pigskin tradition of its own over time, after all, the legacy and aura surrounding a program has to start somewhere. Here's to hoping that one day LU Football can capture at least a fraction of the allure, reputation and nostalgia that surrounds the likes of Notre Dame or Army/Navy football.
Some Links: If we aspire to be the Evangelical version, we should keep abreast of what they are doing to set themselves up academically as well as athletically to be the premier institutions of higher learning & athletics.
1.
http://www.nd.edu/~stratgic/final/index.shtml A Strategic Plan Notre Dame 2010: Fulfilling the Promise [For those who take the time to read this, hopefully the LU movers and shakers, there is some good stuff in here.]
2.
http://www.nd.edu/~frswrite/mcpartlin/2000/Weber.shtml Interesting perspective by ND student for peer project.