Petco Park
Encyclopedia : P : PE : PET : Petco Park
- Redirect
PETCO Park differentiates itself from other MLB ballparks built in the same era by eschewing "retro"-style red brick and green seats. The stadium is clad in Indian sandstone and stucco; its exposed steel is painted white and the 42,445 fixed seats are dark blue. The design is meant to evoke the sandy color of San Diego cliffs and beaches, the blue of the ocean, and the white sails of boats on the nearby bay.
Architect Antoine Predock's design pulled restaurants, administrative offices and other amenities away from the seating bowl itself into other buildings surrounding the bowl. As a result, the ballpark's concourses are open not only to the playing field but also to the surrounding city. Unlike most outdoor ballparks, in which the batter faces in a northeasterly direction, in this ballpark the batter faces due north, and fans in the grandstands are treated to a view of San Diego Bay and the San Diego skyline beyond the left field seats, and a view of Balboa Park, which contains the San Diego Zoo, beyond center field.
An excellent example of adaptive reuse, the Western Metal Supply Company Building, a hundred-year old structure that had been scheduled for demolition to make way for PETCO Park, was saved and incorporated into the design of the ballpark. The building was renovated and contains the team store, private suites, a restaurant and rooftop seating. The corner of the building serves as the left field foul-pole.
The Park at the Park, a grassy berm sloping above the outfield fence, is open during game time allowing fans to sit and watch games for a small price. When no games are being played the Park at the Park serves as a free local park for area residents.
A 30-by-53 foot LED video board, dubbed FriarVision, offers high-resolution replays and graphics, even in direct sunlight. Atop FriarVision in the left-field stands is a 34-by-80 foot Matrix scoreboard displaying animation and cheer graphics, lineups, stats, and game info. Along the upper concourses are LED fascia video boards showing animation and graphics. The one along the first-base side is 3 feet by 236 feet while the third-base side is 3 feet by 252 feet.
Fans in concession stands, in bars, restaurants or wandering the stands can watch the action on 244 high-definition TV monitors and an additional 500 standard-definition TVs. More than 500 computer-controlled speakers throughout the park deliver the sound as a "distributed signal," eliminating the audio delay from a central bank of speakers, such as the system at Qualcomm Stadium. Four stationary cameras, one roving camera and use of six Cox-TV cameras provide videos for the park's screens.
The official address of PETCO Park is 19 Tony Gwynn Way, in honor of the eight-time National League batting champion who wore that uniform number during his entire major league career with the Padres. In the first game ever played at PETCO park, on March 11, 2004, the San Digeo State Aztec baseball team, of which Gwynn is the head coach, notched a victory.
The stadium offers fans the chance to purchase bricks outside of the councourse and dedicate them. Soon after this, PETA bought a brick and secretly tried to sneak a boycott message against PETCO, the owner of the naming rights to the field. The message said, "Break Open Your Cold Ones! Toast The Padres! Enjoy This Championship Organization!" The message spelled BOYCOTT PETCO. The Padres left the brick there.
On March 18 and 20, 2006, PETCO Park hosted the Semi-Finals and the Finals of the first World Baseball Classic.
On November 11, 2005, PETCO Park had its first concert by The Rolling Stones.
External links
- [Official website]
- [Ballpark Digest Visit to PETCO Park]
- [Petco Park Insider: Guide to Padres games at PETCO Park]
| Preceded by: Qualcomm Stadium 1969–2003 | Home of the San Diego Padres 2004–present | Followed by: Current |
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
