StadiumAtlas.com
Rate this stadium
Avoid at all costsNeeds some workWorth a visitExcellent facilitiesWorld-class venue (7 votes 4.57/5)
Loading ... Loading ...

Washington, D.C. // United States
Home to: Washington Nationals // Baseball

Mapping

Mapping selection:
Google Maps
Bing Maps

Profile


Nationals Park is the current ballpark for the Washington Nationals of Major League Baseball. It is the first LEED-certified green stadium in the United States. The facility was opened in time for the 2008 baseball season-opening game (in North America) against the Atlanta Braves on March 30, 2008, and previously hosted collegiate baseball games. It is located along the Anacostia River in the Navy Yard/Near Southeast neighborhood of Washington, D.C. and replaced RFK Stadium as the Nationals’ home ballpark.

The ballpark, designed by HOK Sport and Devrouax & Purnell Architects and Planners, seats 41,888 fans and cost $611 million to build. It sits across the river from the site of D.C. United’s proposed soccer-specific stadium at Poplar Point. The Washington Monument and the U.S. Capitol building are visible from certain areas of the stadium.

The park’s name echoes the original name of the old Washington Senators ballpark, National Park, which was renamed Griffith Stadium when it was rebuilt.

Capacity 41,222
Opened March 30, 2008
Owner D.C. Sports & Entertainment Commission
Cost $611million USD
Architect HOK Sport

Nationals Park is located just one block south of M Street, SE, a main artery through Southeast and Southwest Washington, D.C. The ballpark is accessible from I-395 via the Southwest Freeway, and from I-295 via the Frederick Douglass Memorial Bridge, which carries South Capitol Street across the Anacostia River. The Douglass Bridge was renovated so that South Capitol Street could continue at ground level past the stadium (it was previously 15 feet (4.6 m) above ground level).

The ballpark is also accessible via the Navy Yard station on the Green Line of the Washington Metro. Located a block and a half from the ballpark’s gate in left-center field, the station is heavily used by fans on game day. Prior to the ballpark’s opening, the Navy Yard station’s ballpark entrance and farecard mezzanine underwent a major expansion, along with the addition of an extra escalator and elevator to handle the crowds.

The Nationals run a shuttle service from parking lots at RFK Stadium on game day, given that parking in the immediate vicinity is highly limited. Several Metrobus routes service the park, and various other transit options have been proposed including a potential water taxi service from Virginia.

Cyclists are encouraged to ride to the stadium and are offered bicycle parking. Garage C, located next to the ticket windows along First Street, houses a free bike valet service where fans are invited to store their bikes for the duration of the game.

History

Financing for the stadium was expected to be provided by a banking syndicate led by Deutsche Bank. However, finalization of the financing deal stalled due to complex negotiations among the city government, MLB as owner of the team, and the bank. The bank requested a letter of credit or comparable financial guarantee against stadium rent to cover risks such as poor attendance or terrorism. The requested guarantee was $24 million, with the city requesting that MLB provide the guarantee. The financing situation was since solved and construction began in May 2006.

The site of Nationals Park was chosen by Mayor Anthony Williams as the most viable of four possibilities for a ballpark. The ballpark’s design was released to the public at a press conference on March 14, 2006. Ground breaking was in early 2006. With an ambitious construction schedule of fewer than two years to complete the stadium, a design-build approach was selected to allow the architects and builders to work in concert with one another. Ronnie Strompf, the project superintendent, coordinated the efforts of numerous subcontractors on a daily basis.

The ballpark has 41,000 seats and features 66 suites, all around the infield. Other amenities include the “Oval Office bar”. Team President Stan Kasten also said that the team might sell the naming rights to the levels of the luxury suites, which bear the names of presidents Washington, Jefferson and Lincoln. While the city agreed to spend up to $611 million, Kasten has stated that the principal owners, the Lerner family, spent tens of millions of dollars more on “jazzing up the park”. The park has an out-of-town scoreboard, which is 102 feet (31 m) long, installed in the right field wall. The main scoreboard, at 101 feet (31 m) long and 47 feet (14 m) high, is more than 5 times bigger than the one at RFK Stadium.

On March 13, 2007, Kasten announced that not only was the Nationals new ballpark on schedule to be ready by Opening Day 2008, but that there would be a grove of cherry blossoms located just beyond the left field bleachers. Kasten stated that the cherry blossoms will provide a look that Americans associate with the nation’s capital. The Nationals also have plans to erect three statues in the ballpark, honoring Walter Johnson of the original Washington Senators, Frank Howard of the expansion Senators, and Josh Gibson of the Negro League Homestead Grays, which played many of its games in Washington.[

(source .. wikipedia) reproduced under GFDL

[ Anything to add? Spotted an error? Click here to improve this entry ]

Images


Nationals Park Washington Nationals Park Washington Demerit!

Scoreboard Clock Nationals Park Approaching the Gate Nationals Park Nationals Park - SB

Nationals Park, third base side Nationals Park, Red Porch Nationals Park

Nationals Park 3B (pano)

Why not add your photos?
Some of the above images are reproduced from external sources under the license of the Creative Commons Project

Seating Plan

Nationals Park Washington Seating Plan

Useful Links


Nationals Park wikipedia entry
Washington Nationals

[ Anything to add? Spotted an error? Click here to improve this entry ]

Your Reviews

Leave a comment!

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. You can also subscribe to these comments via RSS.

Be nice. Keep it clean. Stay on topic. No spam.

You can use these tags:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

This is a Gravatar-enabled weblog. To get your own globally-recognized-avatar, please register at Gravatar.