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Former names | Marlins Park (2012–2020) |
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Address | 501 Marlins Way |
Location | Miami, Florida, United States |
Coordinates | 25°46′41″N 80°13′11″W / 25.77806°N 80.21972°W / 25.77806; -80.21972 |
Public transit | Free City of Miami Trolley from Civic Center Marlins Shuttle[1] from Culmer |
Parking | Four main parking garages and six surface lots |
Owner | Miami-Dade County |
Operator | Miami Marlins LP |
Capacity | 36,742 37,442 (with standing room)[2] 34,000 (football)[3] |
Record attendance | 37,446 (March 11, 2017 World Baseball Classic. USA vs Dom. Rep.)[4] |
Field size | Left field line – 344 ft (105 m) Left-center power alley – 386 ft (118 m) Center field – 400 ft (120 m) Right-center power alley – 387 ft (118 m) Right field line – 335 ft (102 m) Backstop: – 47 ft (14.3 m) |
Acreage | 928,000 sq ft (86,200 m2) |
Surface |
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Construction | |
Broke ground | July 1, 2009 (Start of construction preparations) July 18, 2009 (Ceremonial groundbreaking)[6] |
Opened | March 5, 2012 (High school baseball game) March 6, 2012 (exhibition game) April 1, 2012 (spring training game) April 4, 2012 (regular season) |
Construction cost | US$634 million[7] ($841 million in 2023 dollars[8]) |
Architect | Populous[9] |
Project manager | International Facilities Group[10] |
Structural engineer | Bliss & Nyitray, Inc (bowl and track) Walter P Moore (roof) |
Services engineer | M-E Engineers, Inc.[11] |
General contractor | Hunt/Moss Joint Venture |
Main contractors | MARS Contractors Inc.[12] John J. Kirlin, LLC.[13] Structal – Heavy Steel Construction, A division of Canam Group (roof)[14] |
Tenants | |
Miami Marlins (MLB) (2012–present) Miami Beach Bowl (NCAA) (2014–2016) |
|
|
Former names | Marlins Park (2012–2020) |
---|---|
Address | 501 Marlins Way |
Location | Miami, Florida, United States |
Coordinates | 25°46′41″N 80°13′11″W / 25.77806°N 80.21972°W / 25.77806; -80.21972 |
Public transit | Free City of Miami Trolley from Civic Center Marlins Shuttle[1] from Culmer |
Parking | Four main parking garages and six surface lots |
Owner | Miami-Dade County |
Operator | Miami Marlins LP |
Capacity | 36,742 37,442 (with standing room)[2] 34,000 (football)[3] |
Record attendance | 37,446 (March 11, 2017 World Baseball Classic. USA vs Dom. Rep.)[4] |
Field size | Left field line – 344 ft (105 m) Left-center power alley – 386 ft (118 m) Center field – 400 ft (120 m) Right-center power alley – 387 ft (118 m) Right field line – 335 ft (102 m) Backstop: – 47 ft (14.3 m) |
Acreage | 928,000 sq ft (86,200 m2) |
Surface |
|
Construction | |
Broke ground | July 1, 2009 (Start of construction preparations) July 18, 2009 (Ceremonial groundbreaking)[6] |
Opened | March 5, 2012 (High school baseball game) March 6, 2012 (exhibition game) April 1, 2012 (spring training game) April 4, 2012 (regular season) |
Construction cost | US$634 million[7] ($841 million in 2023 dollars[8]) |
Architect | Populous[9] |
Project manager | International Facilities Group[10] |
Structural engineer | Bliss & Nyitray, Inc (bowl and track) Walter P Moore (roof) |
Services engineer | M-E Engineers, Inc.[11] |
General contractor | Hunt/Moss Joint Venture |
Main contractors | MARS Contractors Inc.[12] John J. Kirlin, LLC.[13] Structal – Heavy Steel Construction, A division of Canam Group (roof)[14] |
Tenants | |
Miami Marlins (MLB) (2012–present) Miami Beach Bowl (NCAA) (2014–2016) |