Citi Field

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Citi Field
Image:Citi Field Promo.jpg
Location Roosevelt Avenue
Flushing, New York
Broke ground November 13 2006
Opened Opening Day 2009 (planned)
Owner City of New York
Operator New York Mets
Surface Grass
Construction cost $610 million
Architect HOK Sport
Former names New Mets Ballpark (Planning-November 12, 2006)
Tenants New York Mets (MLB) (2009-present)
Capacity 45,000 (approx.)
Field Dimensions
Left Field - 335 ft (102 m)
Left Center - 379 ft (116 m)
Center Field - 408 ft (124 m)
Right Center - 383 ft (119 m)
Right Field - 330 ft (101 m)

Citi Field will be the new Major League Baseball stadium for the New York Mets that is being built in Willets Point in the New York City borough of Queens as a replacement for Shea Stadium, which was constructed in 1964 adjacent to the site of the 1964 World's Fair. It has been designed by HOK Sport. Citi Field is scheduled to open for the 2009 baseball season, coinciding with the opening of the New York Yankees' new stadium in the Bronx.

Contents

[edit] Plans for a new Mets ballpark

The original plans for what will now be Citi Field were created as part of the New York City 2012 Olympic bid. After plans for a West Side Stadium fell through, New York looked for an alternate stadium to host the opening and closing ceremonies. The Olympic stadium project was estimated to cost $2.2 billion with $180 million provided by New York City and New York State. If New York had won the bid, the stadium would have been expanded to host the opening and closing ceremonies, as well as other sporting events, and the Mets would have played their baseball season at New Yankee Stadium. Citi Field will be built despite New York's loss of the Games to London's bid. The location of the stadium was slightly altered and it can no longer be expanded into an Olympic stadium should New York win a future bid.

[edit] Design and construction

Image:Citi Field 11-23-07.jpg
Third base side of Citi Field under construction, 11/23/07.

The new stadium is planned to have a capacity of 45,000 (~ 41,000 seats, ~ 4,000 standing room) and have an exterior facade reminiscent of Ebbets Field (a feature also at Coors Field and Safeco Field, which was long sought by Mets owner Fred Wilpon, a Brooklyn native) with an interior that many have stated evokes design features of recent ballparks, most notably Oriole Park at Camden Yards in Baltimore. The projected cost of the new stadium and other infrastructure improvements is $610 million, with the Mets picking up $420 million of that amount. The agreement includes a 40-year lease that will keep the Mets in New York until 2049. The stadium will be accessible via the Long Island Rail Road (Shea Stadium station) and the New York City Subway 7 train (Willets Point-Shea Stadium station), as the current facility is. On March 18 2006, the New York Mets unveiled the official model for the new stadium. By July 2006, initial construction of the new park was underway in the parking lot beyond left-field, with a hopeful finish in time for Opening Day 2009 in late March of that year.

[edit] Home of the Mets

Image:Citi Field 10-12-07 010.jpg
Citi Field under construction. 10/12/07.

This stadium would be the third stadium which the Mets would call home during their nearly 50 year history. The Mets played the 1962 and 1963 seasons at the Polo Grounds, which had also been the home of the New York Yankees and New York Giants.[1] In 1964, they moved to their current home, Shea Stadium, which in the recent frenzy of ballpark building, is now the fifth oldest stadium in the MLB, and the third oldest in the National League.

[edit] Naming rights

On November 13 2006, it was officially announced that the stadium would be called Citi Field, named for Citigroup Inc. Citigroup will be paying $20 million a year for the naming rights to the park over the next 20 years. This made Citi Field the second major league sports venue in the area named for a corporate sponsor (after Continental Airlines Arena in New Jersey, but preceding Prudential Center in Newark and Barclays Center at Atlantic Yards in Brooklyn), officially becoming the first in New York City itself, aside from two minor league ballparks (KeySpan Park and Richmond County Bank Ballpark). The contract includes an option on both sides to extend the contract to 35 years, and is the most expensive sports-stadium naming rights agreement ever, subsequently equaled by Barclays' $400 million deal with the Nets for their planned arena in Brooklyn.[2]

At the groundbreaking for Citi Field, it was announced that the main entrance, modeled on the one in Brooklyn's old Ebbets Field, will be called the Jackie Robinson Rotunda, possibly due to campaigns to forego naming rights and name the ballpark after Robinson. The Mets are spending more than $600 million for the new stadium, which New York City and New York state are also supporting with a total of $165 million for such costs as infrastructure and site preparation.[3]

[edit] Planned stadium facts

Image:Shea relation Citi Field.jpg
Relation of Citi Field, right, to Shea Stadium.

Comparison between Shea Stadium and Citi Field (From the New York Mets website)

Shea Stadium Citi Field
Opening Day 1964 2009
Capacity 57,333 45,000 (approx.)
Seat width 19" to 20", 19" average 19" to 24", 21" average
Legroom 32" 33" to 39"
Average concourse width 21 ft. 43 ft.
Wheelchair seating 174 830
Luxury suites 45 54
Restaurants (total capacity) 2 (528) 4 (3,334)
Team store 2,600 sq. ft. 7,200 sq. ft.
No. of toilets 568 646
Public elevators 4 11
Field dimensions (feet) Left field - 338
Left center - 371
Center - 410
Right center - 371
Right field - 338
Left field - 335
Left center - 379
Center - 408
Right center - 383
Right field - 330

[edit] 1998 Proposed Ballpark

In 1998, the Mets released plans for a new ballpark that featured a retractable roof, and was designed after Ebbets Field. Due to financial limitations, the Mets decided to forego the retractable roof in favor of an open-air ballpark. This 1998 proposed ballpark was the same model that was tentatively agreed upon to along with a retractable roof Yankee Stadium in the Bronx in December 2001.

[edit] Trivia

  • On May 19, 2007, David Wright hit a 460 foot, 2-run home run off New York Yankees reliever Mike Myers. The home run went over the Shea Stadium bleachers and landed in the Citi Field construction site, and Mets radio announcer Howie Rose jokingly referred to it as the first home run in the history of Citi Field.
  • The naming of the stadium earned the Mets a Worst Person in the World bronze on the November 13, 2006 edition of Countdown with Keith Olbermann. Olbermann stated that unhappy Mets fans "have already nicknamed Citi Field something that rhymes with 'Citi' but which we can’t say here. See if you can guess." This was a reference to the fact that Mets fans pay some of the highest ticket, concession and parking charges in the National League.[4]

[edit] Citi Field Construction Photo Gallery

[edit] References

2nd

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


Preceded by
Shea Stadium
1964–2008
Home of the
New York Mets
2009–
Succeeded by
N/A
fr:Citi Field

sv:Citi Field

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