|
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Former names | Pacific Bell Park (2000–2003) SBC Park (2004–2005) AT&T Park (2006–2018) |
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Address | 24 Willie Mays Plaza |
Location | San Francisco, California |
Coordinates | 37°46′43″N 122°23′21″W / 37.77861°N 122.38917°W / 37.77861; -122.38917 |
Public transit | |
Owner | Port of San Francisco |
Operator | San Francisco Baseball Associates LP |
Capacity | Baseball:
1,500 standing-room capacity NCAA Football: 45,000 (2011)[2] Rugby sevens: 42,000 |
Record attendance | 44,046 (2010 NLDS Game 2) |
Field size | Left field line – 339 feet (103 m) Left field – 354 feet (108 m) Left-center field – 399 feet (122 m) Center field – 391 feet (119 m) Right-center field – 415 feet (126 m) Right field – 365 feet (111 m) Right field line – 309 feet (94 m) Backstop – 48 feet (15 m)
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Surface | Tifway 419 Bermuda Grass |
Construction | |
Broke ground | December 11, 1997 (December 11, 1997) |
Opened | April 11, 2000 (April 11, 2000) |
Renovated | October 2019 – June 2020 |
Construction cost | US$357 million (US$632 million in 2023 dollars[3]) |
Architect | HOK Sport[4] |
Project manager | Alliance Building Partners[5] |
Structural engineer | Thornton Tomasetti[6] |
Services engineer | M-E Engineers, Inc.[7] |
General contractor | Hunt/Kajima[8] |
Tenants | |
San Francisco Giants (MLB) (2000–present) San Francisco Demons (XFL) (2001) Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl (NCAA) (2002–2013) California Redwoods (UFL) (2009) California Golden Bears (NCAA) (2011) |
|
|
Former names | Pacific Bell Park (2000–2003) SBC Park (2004–2005) AT&T Park (2006–2018) |
---|---|
Address | 24 Willie Mays Plaza |
Location | San Francisco, California |
Coordinates | 37°46′43″N 122°23′21″W / 37.77861°N 122.38917°W / 37.77861; -122.38917 |
Public transit | |
Owner | Port of San Francisco |
Operator | San Francisco Baseball Associates LP |
Capacity | Baseball:
1,500 standing-room capacity NCAA Football: 45,000 (2011)[2] Rugby sevens: 42,000 |
Record attendance | 44,046 (2010 NLDS Game 2) |
Field size | Left field line – 339 feet (103 m) Left field – 354 feet (108 m) Left-center field – 399 feet (122 m) Center field – 391 feet (119 m) Right-center field – 415 feet (126 m) Right field – 365 feet (111 m) Right field line – 309 feet (94 m) Backstop – 48 feet (15 m)
|
Surface | Tifway 419 Bermuda Grass |
Construction | |
Broke ground | December 11, 1997 (December 11, 1997) |
Opened | April 11, 2000 (April 11, 2000) |
Renovated | October 2019 – June 2020 |
Construction cost | US$357 million (US$632 million in 2023 dollars[3]) |
Architect | HOK Sport[4] |
Project manager | Alliance Building Partners[5] |
Structural engineer | Thornton Tomasetti[6] |
Services engineer | M-E Engineers, Inc.[7] |
General contractor | Hunt/Kajima[8] |
Tenants | |
San Francisco Giants (MLB) (2000–present) San Francisco Demons (XFL) (2001) Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl (NCAA) (2002–2013) California Redwoods (UFL) (2009) California Golden Bears (NCAA) (2011) |