Residents in one Orange County neighborhood think a proposed soccer stadium will force them out.

On Monday, Orlando's City Commission approved funding for a stadium for the Orlando City Soccer Club, which will be built in the Parramore neighborhood.

J. Henry's barber shop has been on Parramore Avenue and Church Street for almost 20 years.

"I've been in the neighborhood pretty much all my life. With any neighborhood you’re going to have your ups and your downs, and some crime," Henry said.

Henry is anxiously awaiting the decision of whether the stadium, which he would be able to see from his front window, will be built.

"I hope that I still get the opportunity to own and operate my business in the neighborhood just as well as my coworkers," Henry said.

"You have a lot of people who don't want no changes,” said Paul Thomas, a Parramore resident. “Then you have people who if it's going to help the neighborhood they are looking forward to it."

Thomas has lived on Terry Avenue for 20 years.

He watched workers build the Amway Center in his yard and is one block away from the proposed stadium.

Thomas worries people like himself would be pushed further west.

"If they put that there, then eventually they are going to start moving people further and further out, and they are going to put more activities here, and that’s the main thing people are going to be worried about," Thomas said.

Most of the stadium’s land is undeveloped except for a church and other building. The city is using imminent domain to purchase the land.

The stadium should take up the land from Central Boulevard south to Church Street and west to Parramore Avenue.

Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer said the city has protected the single family residential neighborhoods.

"It comes down into the neighborhood so that the least intense development happens near the residential areas and of course the main development will be on Church Street and that will be commercial on both sides," Dyer said.

Lawanna Gelzer believes the money could be spent better to clean up the Parramore neighborhood.

Gelzer has been one of Dyer's biggest critics on the stadium.

The mayor even had words for her Monday after she was holding her sign up behind a group picture.