The final FC Cincinnati Major League Soccer stadium design will be unveiled Tuesday at a press conference, the team announced Sunday.

An earlier design, released in April, depicted a "grand staircase," which team officials said were supposed to echo the Spanish Steps in Rome and the steps leading into the New York City Public Library.

The stadium is expected to be wrapped in ribbons of a plastics material that will emit an orange glow. It's been much anticipated by fans, but Tuesday will be the first real look at how it will be incorporated into the design.

The April drawings also showed a two-story, glass-walled team store with space outside for a kids area on game days.

Previous renderings also show a canopy over every seat.

And FC Cincinnati President and General Manager Jeff Berding has publicly talked about a beer hall that would face in to the stadium and outward, as a way to integrate the stadium into the neighborhood. Though it has not been part of any previously released renderings.

In March, the team announced it had hired a new architect, Populous, to replace the first chosen architect, New York- and Los Angeles-based Meis. Populous is known for its work on soccer stadiums throughout the world.

At the time Berding said, "FCC's vision for the West End stadium is unique. The West End Stadium will stand out among not only soccer-specific stadiums, but also sports stadiums, in North America."

The new design could incorporate any of what has been previously said – or none of it.

In a press release, the team said Berding, club managing owner and CEO Carl H. Lindner III and Populous’ Jonathan Mallie – the lead architect on the project – will unveil the design in a late-morning press event on Tuesday. A panel discussion will follow.

Elevar, the local architect, remains in place.

FC Cincinnati was awarded a Major League Soccer expansion team this year, with the caveat that it build a stadium in or near the urban core. The team is building a $250 million privately funded stadium, with roughly $35 million in taxpayer-funded incentives for infrastructure needs.

The foundation is being poured now and the stadium is set to open in time for the 2021 soccer season.

The stadium site runs between Wade Street and the city's District One police station on Ezzard Charles Drive. In the plans shown Monday night, the police station remains where it is, as does the Cincinnati Ballet.