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Architect Breaks Down Baseball Stadium Details (Past & Present)

Hey, batter batter! Michael Wyetzner of Michielli + Wyetzner Architects returns to AD, this time breaking down the architectural details found in baseball stadiums around North America. From some of the earliest homes of the national pastime to current multi-billion dollar behemoths, Michael offers up expert insight on what makes each of them distinct.

Released on 08/23/2022

Transcript

Hi, I'm Michael Wyetzner

and I've been an architect for 35 years

and today we're gonna look at the architectural evolution

of baseball stadiums here in north America.

So baseball has been around since like the 1840s,

我n fact, soldiers played it during the civil war,

but Major League baseball didn't start until 1869

with the first professional team,

the Cincinnati Red Stockings.

And in that era, the stadiums were built out of wood,

but one of the most notable wooden ballparks

was actually built in 1902.

And that was the Palace of the Fans in Cincinnati.

So what jumps out at me immediately

我s this symmetry they employ,

putting this pediment sitting on these columns,

almost like a little Greek temple

directly behind home plate.

Then the wings of the stadium extend out.

他们似乎喜欢歌剧盒子,

which you can see here are in a serrated sort of pattern

supported on brackets.

And these are sort of a precursor of today's luxury boxes

that you find in stadiums all over the country.

And then extending just beyond those boxes

are the columns that support the grandstand.

And stadiums of this type and of this time

always had columns supporting them.

And if you had to sit behind the column,

your view was impeded,

但通常这些座位是便宜。

And so these columns support this extended capital

which supports the entablature

which runs all around,

and that in entablature is supporting the upper grandstand.

And the upper grandstand has a very similar quality,

在that it's supported on brackets,

which by itself becomes a kind of ornament.

And then there's these very small columns

holding up the roof

and they have a very simple sort of bracing

like you would find on any farm structure.

So even though it appears somewhat grand,

我t's actually not at all.

It's actually a really small scale.

This stadium only held about 6,000 people.

So this is a precursor

to what stadiums are going to become,

where instead of just being this utilitarian grandstand

that just holds people to watch a game,

they actually try and become pieces of architecture.

Next up, Shibe Park in Philadelphia.

So here's what jumps out at me about Shibe Park.

It's built inside the city grid,

so it's part of the city.

You can see all these row houses that are surrounding it,

those are all places where people lived.

And the row houses almost become

an extension of the seating

because people would stand on the roofs

to watch the game,

very similar to what people do in Wrigley Field in Chicago.

The other thing about being built into the city grid is that

because it's this huge open expanse

我t becomes almost like this grand plaza or a park.

Hence, the name ballpark.

And the other thing that stands out is

我t's got this very classical French Renaissance facade.

I mean, it's a real building.

It's no longer just a ballpark.

It has a mansard roof, staying with the French idea,

with these dormers sticking out of it.

Let's get a closer look at the facade.

It's made out of brick.

The lowest floor is a more rusticated arrangement of brick,

closer to the earth, a little rougher,

and then it gets more refined as it goes up.

These columns support this beautiful entablature

with the dentals all along the edge

that runs itself into the rotunda at the corner.

That rotunda has this wonderful dome

where you can see the ribs of the dome are expressed

在these double columns.

So from this angle, you would never know

that there was a ball field beyond here.

It just appears to be like any other office building

at the beginning of the 20th century in Philadelphia.

这是真实的ly the beginning

of the jewel box era of baseball stadiums in America.

And what I think they meant by jewel box is two things.

One, I think they meant

these buildings are very ornamented and very decorated.

But the other thing I think they mean

我s the small scale of them, almost like a jewel box.

They fit within the city.

So while all these ballparks were being built

there was another half of baseball being played out.

And that was the Negro Leagues.

And the Negro Leagues existed

because people of color were excluded

from the Major Leagues.

This wasn't always the case.

Up until the 1880s, there were Black ball teams

and integrated ball teams

that played in the Major Leagues.

They encountered and endured discrimination,

but they were still part of Major League Baseball.

But in the 1880s, they were no longer permitted to.

And it wasn't until 60 years later

that this was remedied with the coming of Jackie Robinson.

So starting in the 1880s

there was a flourishing other baseball league,

the Negro Leagues,

and they hosted some of the greatest players

to ever play the game.

Josh Gibson, Satchel Paige, Cool Papa Bell,

and the gregarious Buck O'Neill,

who was a great raconteur with the Kansas City Monarchs.

Today, finally, Negro League baseball is recognized

by the Baseball Hall of Fame.

And a lot of these players have been inducted posthumously,

as well as their records are now recognized

as part of Major League Baseball.

And a prime example of a Negro League's baseball stadium

我s Rickwood Field in Birmingham, Alabama.

Built in 1910, it's the oldest extant

professional baseball stadium in the United States.

So the thing I really like about Rickwood Field

我s that it's of its climate.

It's in the south where it's hot and humid

and the building is reminiscent of a Spanish style building

made of stucco and a red tile roof.

Stucco is ideal for a warm weather climate

because there's not a lot of freeze thaw,

so the stucco doesn't crack.

It just feels like a building,

我t's not necessarily a stadium yet.

So the other great thing about this stadium

我s that a 16 year old Willie Mays,

who grew up nearby,

played in the 1948 Negro League World Series

的提单ack Barons.

That's how great a ballplayer he was.

So the thing about a baseball field is

there's very little that is prescribed,

other than the distance between the bases

and the distance from home plate to the pitcher's mound.

Everything beyond the infield is basically malleable.

A baseball field is called a diamond for a reason,

cause it's basically a square turned at a 45 degree angle.

And the distance between these bases is 90 feet.

And this is first base,

second base,

third base,

and here's home plate.

And the other distance that's prescribed

我s the distance to the pitcher's mound,

which is essentially in the middle,

and that's 60 feet, six inches to the center of the circle.

And when you turn that you get a baseball diamond.

Beyond those bases,

back then the outfield could be

whatever dimension it needs to be

to fit into the city grid.

And also note that home plate

我s actually shaped like a house.

So, of course, this malleability

leads to some very funky shaped ballparks.

The Polo Grounds in New York,

Hinchliffe Stadium in Paterson, New Jersey,

League Park in Cleveland,

and of course, Fenway Park in Boston.

So here's an overhead shot of Fenway Park,

and of course, parts of the Boston grid are not orthogonal

and Lansdowne Street slices off left field.

And that's why you get the great Green Monster,

that wall that separates the stadium from Lansdowne Street.

But the rest of the grid

allows it to have very deep grandstand surrounding it.

The stadium was built in 1912,

and at the time they fit it into where they could fit it in.

Now let's talk about one of the great

我conic stadiums in baseball,

and that's Yankee Stadium in New York.

So Yankee Stadium was built in 1923.

It was built on a 10 acre site

that was formally a lumber yard

and it was built with a short right field fence

to suit the batting style of the famous Babe Ruth.

Yankee Stadium is sort of the first

that no longer looks like a regular old office building

在the city.

All of a sudden it's starting to look like a stadium,

like its own building type.

It was much bigger than all the previous stadiums.

It held like 58,000 people in 1923, which was enormous.

And the whole scale of it is bigger now.

It's almost reminiscent of the Colosseum in Rome,

with these big arched openings

between these very prominent vertical columns,

but it's stripped down.

They don't have any capitals.

In fact, the whole thing is sort of

this stripped down classicism.

And it's made completely of limestone,

which is basically the Yankees flexing their muscle,

even back then,

to show that they were the richest team in baseball

and that they could build a stadium all out of limestone.

And it's got this great big entrance gate

which is very reminiscent of like a triumphal arch.

And the other thing it has,

which is very distinctive,

我s it has this big plaza out in front.

So, it's part of the city grid

at 161st Street and River Avenue,

but at the same time,

我t's a big enough piece of property

that they were able to set the stadium back

and create this sort of plaza

人们机之前和之后的比赛.

It's no longer looks like just a regular old office building

在the city that's concealing this big, beautiful field.

Now, when you approach Yankee Stadium,

you know what goes on inside its walls.

Next up, Cleveland Municipal Stadium.

So the thing about Cleveland Municipal Stadium

that makes it unique,

我t's the first stadium built not inside the city grid.

So it's the 1930s now,

and they've moved just outside the city.

It's still next to the city

but it's just sort of touching it.

And what they were able to do

我s it's no longer formed by the city grid.

They could not only make it out of a perfect shape

like they wanted,

but they could also build it to whatever size they wanted.

And here they went a little crazy with the scale

and they actually built it too big.

So now this stadium holds 78,000 people.

And they had to bring in the outfield fence

because nobody was able to hit a home run

在the original stadium.

And the other thing that is interesting

about Cleveland Municipal Stadium is the word municipal.

And it gets that name because

我t's the first stadium built

that included public money.

Previously, the owners of the stadiums

all paid for their own building,

but this is the first time

where the taxpayers also contributed.

Okay, so let's take a look at the building.

It's sitting without any context,

other than the city beyond.

It's got this regular pattern of large scale windows

surrounding it and unrelieved.

And it's got these little triangular pieces

which I assume hold the ramps

and the stairways for people to get out.

And the other thing is, it still has columns.

You can see in the upper deck here

part of it is cantilever,

but most of the upper deck is beyond the columns

and fans still had to contend with that blocking their view.

So let's look at another stadium

that sits even further outside the city limits.

Candlestick Park in San Francisco.

So, now stadiums are their own typology.

They're their own distinctive kind of building.

And they have very distinctive

sorts of architectural gestures that express this.

You can see it's got this pretty cool triangular truss

with all these diagonals that go around.

It's got this really distinctive roof

where the ribs are exposed

that grow out of those triangular trusses.

And it's got these big grandstands.

They're all now cantilevered,

there's no more columns.

Essential light poles that are also part

of the architecture of the stadium,

cause most games now are starting to transition

我nto night games.

[Reporter] San Francisco's Candlestick Park

我s a setting for an historic sports -

So it's 1960, it's post World War II.

The economy in America is humming along.

Cars have now replaced the railroad

as the main means of transportation.

Not only are the stadiums being built

outside the city limits,

but a lot of people have moved outside the city limits.

And so, these stadiums are built

我n a sea of parking, in just a sea of asphalt,

which is terrible for the environment, for one.

And secondly, there's no urban life

around these stadiums anymore.

So there's no corner bar,

there's no cafe, there's no pizza place to go to

before or after the game.

And in a sense, the game itself becomes the only event.

It's now cut itself off from the life of the city.

So this concrete and steel structure,

which is very reminiscent of Italian rationalism,

something that Italian engineer and architect

Nervi would've done.

It's also sort of a foreshadowing

of the real brutalist stadiums to come

这都是由混凝土制成的。

Veterans Field in Philadelphia,

Three Rivers Stadium in Pittsburgh,

and Riverfront Stadium in Cincinnati, to name just a few.

Now, let's look at a totally different

kind of stadium type,

and that's the Astrodome in Houston.

So the thing about the Astrodome is it's built in 1965.

NASA and the Space Program are huge in America at that time.

Houston wanted to capitalize on that.

So, they changed the game completely

by creating and building the first indoor baseball stadium.

They created this enormous dome

that spans about 462 feet, which is huge.

And they create an indoor room to watch baseball in.

It is air conditioned, so it's always 72 degrees inside.

And because it's inside, they can't grow grass,

so they invent this synthetic grass

which they call AstroTurf.

So the Astrodome was actually inspired

by the Palazetto Dello Sport in Rome,

which was designed by the great Pier Luigi Nervi

for the 1960 Olympics.

This building might have been inspired by Nervi,

but it has very little of sort of his grace

and inventiveness.

This concrete armature that surrounds

this perfect circle of a stadium

actually has the tapered beams

so that the lintels above these entrances

almost become triangular at the top,

which is very reminiscent of something Yamasaki,

who is the designer of the World Trade Center,

would have done.

Baseball stadiums, essentially starting with Yankee Stadium,

were all about looking forward and doing the next new thing.

Let's jump forward now

and take a look at a stadium that starts to look back.

And that's Oriole Park at Camden Yards in Baltimore.

So, now it's 1992

and it's almost 30 years since the Astrodome has been built.

Up to this point, stadiums,

starting with Municipal Stadium in Cleveland in 1932,

had been moving away from the city.

And now this is an attempt

to return the stadium back to the city.

And it's the first and the best

of what becomes known as the retro era of ballparks.

Well, let's take a look at the stadium

and let me tell you what jumps out at me.

So the first thing

我s this warehouse that runs along the back

and that is an old railroad warehouse,

cause the tracks used to run by here.

Originally, the architects were gonna knock that down

but the efforts of Janet Marie Smith,

the project manager for the whole thing for the Orioles,

我nsisted actually that they keep it.

So, that becomes a backdrop to the stadium

and so now the city becomes a backdrop to the stadium.

And the ballpark now has sort of returned

to the city, where before it had left.

So it has this very prominent stone base

closest to the earth.

It has these brick arches,

which are interrupted by this waterline,

which ties the whole thing together.

It has these clock towers

which are concealing the exit stairs.

And then it has this very utilitarian steel structure

that sits atop the brick structure,

which is also sort of reminiscent

of the very early stadiums

that were built somewhat in the jewel box era.

And so they deliberately kept the scale down.

It only holds 45,000 people.

In which case, it doesn't have to be super tall.

And it really acts like a good neighbor in the city.

This is a great example of the retro era of stadiums,

but it inspired a lot of bad examples.

And let's take a look at one of them right now.

And that's Citi Field in New York.

Like Camden Yards, Citi Field has this brick base

and then they have this sort of utilitarian steel structure

atop for the grandstand and the light towers.

But, it lacks the small scale of Camden Yards

and it's not part of the city grid.

And its design is based on a stadium

that was very connected to the city,

and that's Ebbets Field, which was in Brooklyn.

Ebbets Field was built on an old garbage dump

called Pig Town, just east of Prospect Park.

This is the place where Jackie Robinson

broke the color barrier

by being brought up to the Dodgers in 1947.

One of the great milestones in baseball history.

Ebbets Field is very much a product of the city grid.

It's surrounded by Sullivan Street and Bedford Avenue.

It's built in that era when the stadiums

were still just buildings

that surrounded a big baseball field.

And because of that, it's got ornamentation

and scale and refinement

that a nice brick building of that era would have.

So, built in 1913, it's got these beautiful big windows

but those windows are divided into much smaller mullions,

breaking down the scale.

It has these lovely column capitals,

these Corinthian capitals that sit atop the pilasters,

that are all made out of brick.

It has these large double hung windows

on the level above that,

which is very reminiscent of a domestic scale.

It's got the brick spandrel over here

with these indentations,

and then the capitals, again,

from which the arches spring.

And then within those arches

我t again has these small scale refined windows.

So, everything about it is beautifully scaled

city building that belongs in the neighborhood.

And then Citi Field takes that

and they do this sort of enormous

watered down version of it

and they blow it up in scale.

And you can see, compare the size of a person here

to the size of a person here,

and you get an indication of how much bigger Citi Field is.

And when they make it that much bigger

they don't give it any of the sort of small scale details

that Ebbets Field had.

So now let's look at a stadium

that brings baseball back to the city,

but does it in a different way.

And that's Loandepot Park in Miami, Florida,

where the Marlins play.

So the thing I love about this stadium in Miami,

我t's its own thing

and it's not trying to be what it isn't.

In fact, the first thing that jumps out at me

are these huge columns that support the tracks

that are there solely for the retractable roof

when it pulls back.

The other thing that I love about this,

the ramps are outdoor.

They're not covered.

It's Miami, they don't need to cover them.

They express the shape and the function of the ramps.

And then it has this huge window along the back

that can slide open,

so even when the roof is closed

the stadium can still be part of the city.

But as you can see, this stadium's part of the city grid.

There were streets running by here.

There were streets running by here.

前面有一个公园。

And it's a real amenity for the city.

It's not built in a sea of parking out in the suburbs.

So the other really nice part about this retractable roof

我s that when it's pulled open

and it's sitting on these huge treelike columns

我t's that it actually forms a covered porch

for the entire stadium,

which is also just a very nice sort of transition space

before you get into the big stadium.

So the first retractable stadium to be built

was the Rogers Center in Toronto,

which was built for the Bluejays.

There, it was necessitated by the extreme cold.

But in Miami, it was built for the opposite reason.

The extreme weather is in the middle of the summer

在the heat and the hurricane season.

So in Miami, it's like a logical conclusion

from all the elements we've looked at.

They've taken the best of stadium design

and they've tried to incorporate it into the city.

They have everything there.

They have indoor and outdoor.

They have a park right outside of it for the public.

They've accommodated parking with parking structures,

taking advantage of the verticality of the city.

They've returned the stadium and the game

to the city grid itself.

So, these are some of the most interesting

architectural details I noticed

在the evolution of North American ballparks.

Let me know what other kind of buildings

I should analyze next

在the comments below.