With Saturday’s open house of the Bielenberg Field House in Woodbury, Minnesota United FC is one step closer to a new training facility.

United owner Bill McGuire contributed more than $1 million to the $22 million sports complex with plans to move in during July, but construction delays pushed that back. With the locker room and weight room still unfinished, a revised move-in date hasn’t been set.

United will have access to 7,500 square feet of training space — funded by McGuire — and a full-sized indoor turf field. Bielenberg has the largest indoor soccer field in Minnesota, and the 90,000-square-foot field house is about the same size as facilities for the Vikings and University of Minnesota.

“Providing our players with a top training facility is crucial for our success, and this partnership is another great step for us as we continue to build our organization on and off the field,” United team president Nick Rogers said when the agreement was announced last September.

Loons coach Manny Lagos said the residency in Bielenberg will help in recruiting new players.

“I am excited about what this means for our future,” he said at the field house’s ribbon cutting Tuesday.

The club currently uses the National Sports Center in Blaine.

The second-place United (6-1-3) will play at first-place San Antonio (7-3-1) on Saturday. United, which won the spring season, is guaranteed a spot in the North American Soccer League playoffs in November.

Follow Andy Greder at twitter.com/andygreder.