It doesn't seem the renderings begin to show the reality of building on that particular site and the images have to be distorted.
Look at these two renderings. The stage (which is supposed to be much lower) is above the trucks and then the road and everything behind it is a the current grade (everything around there is very flat).
And then the rear – which should be much higher – has oceans of parking at the same level of the back of the seating, save maybe a few feet. You can't see any sort of raised plateau by the buildings in the distance on the same grade.
So the actual grade change from the stage to the last seats has to be quite small.
The grade change number comes from comparing the floor level at Paycom to the highest seats, which is a little over 100' (130' from floor to roof). So if the Sunset grade change is significantly less -- and it would very much have to be -- that means the back of this facility would be way farther away from the stage.
I think these renderings are strongly distorted (remember, they've used them for proposed projects in other cities) to make the facility look far more compact than simple math would allow.
Bookmarks