The move of the press box to the end of the suite level allowed the ballpark designers to install a 200-plus-capacity Stadium Club behind home place. Fans buying Club-level tickets have access to the bar, which also serves food, as well as a padded seat behind home plate. These really are the best seats in the house; spring for them if you visit the ballpark.
The Stadium Club bar is two sided; one side is decidicated to Club patrons while the other is open to suite patrons who might want additional food and/or drinks for their consumption.
The outfield fence is a fascinating feature of this ballpark. It is anything but symmetrical, and the specific design was really dicated by the eight-acre ballpark site. Beyond right field a two-lane street runs next to the ballpark, and the curve of the wall and fence match the curve of the street; the height also matches the pitch of the land, so it seems to gently curve and undulate. In each corner the fence juts out from the ballpark wall to make room for bullpens. There's no place for players to hide here; the concourses run beside and behind each.
In right field, the corner is occupied by a kids' play area, along with a grass berm and picnic tables. Parent can feel comfortable heading out there and letting the kids run free while they watch the game. In left field, the concourse leads to a left-field picnic/group area. In a nice design touch, the brickwork out here looks like something lifted from a WPA-era facility, but not over the top. It adds a classic feel to the facility.
Clubhouses and groundskeeper facilities are located beyond left and center field; that's where players enter the ballpark. These facilities include decent-sized clubhouses, batting cages and training rooms.
The large videoboard and a left-field LED ribbon board are from Daktronics.
Huge sections of the ballpark are not finished, as serious construction of the facility began less than a year ago. (A bit of background: a group of downtown organizers had been working for years on a ballpark-funding plan, and only last year did a tax-increment financing district be established. The ballpark is one part of a larger $250-million redevelopment district that will also include a new performing-arts center, and delays in selling bonds for the projecr resulted in a late start for ballpark construction.) A grand three-story entryway into the new team offices and gift shop is a vast expanse of sheetrock. The sections of the that building opening into the first-base concourse are not completed, either. A center-field berm is closed, the result of last-minute budget cuts. And a parking ramp next to the ballpark probably won't open until next season.
These temporary shortcomings don't detract from the classic and successful feel to the ballpark, however. We'll be eager to see the ballpark again once it is finished.