|
|
Address | 1 Twins Way |
---|---|
Location | Minneapolis, Minnesota |
Coordinates | 44°58′54″N 93°16′42″W / 44.98167°N 93.27833°W / 44.98167; -93.27833 |
Public transit | Northstar Line Blue Line Green Line at Target Field station |
Owner | Minnesota Ballpark Authority [1] |
Operator | Twins Ballpark LLC |
Capacity | 39,504 (2010–2012)[1] 39,021 (2013–2015)[2] 38,871 (2016)[3] 38,885 (2017)[4] 38,649 (2018)[5] 38,544 (2019–present)[6] |
Record attendance | 45,000+ (P!nk, August 10, 2023) |
Field size | Left Field – 339 feet (103 m) Left-Center – 377 feet (115 m) Center Field left corner – 411 feet (125 m) Center Field right corner – 403 feet (123 m) Right-Center – 367 feet (112 m) Right Field – 328 feet (100 m) |
Surface | Kentucky Bluegrass |
Construction | |
Broke ground | August 30, 2007 (August 30, 2007) |
Opened | April 12, 2010 (April 12, 2010) |
Construction cost | US$555 million[7] |
Architect | Populous (formerly HOK Sport) Hammel, Green and Abrahamson |
Project manager | International Facilities Group, LLC.[8] |
Structural engineer | Walter P Moore Engineers and Consultants[9] |
Services engineer | M-E Engineers, Inc.[10] |
General contractor | Mortenson/Thor[11] |
Tenants | |
Minnesota Twins (MLB) (2010–present) Minnesota Golden Gophers (NCAA) (2011) |
|
Website | |
http://www.mlb.com/twins/ballpark/ |
|
|
Address | 1 Twins Way |
---|---|
Location | Minneapolis, Minnesota |
Coordinates | 44°58′54″N 93°16′42″W / 44.98167°N 93.27833°W / 44.98167; -93.27833 |
Public transit | Northstar Line Blue Line Green Line at Target Field station |
Owner | Minnesota Ballpark Authority [1] |
Operator | Twins Ballpark LLC |
Capacity | 39,504 (2010–2012)[1] 39,021 (2013–2015)[2] 38,871 (2016)[3] 38,885 (2017)[4] 38,649 (2018)[5] 38,544 (2019–present)[6] |
Record attendance | 45,000+ (P!nk, August 10, 2023) |
Field size | Left Field – 339 feet (103 m) Left-Center – 377 feet (115 m) Center Field left corner – 411 feet (125 m) Center Field right corner – 403 feet (123 m) Right-Center – 367 feet (112 m) Right Field – 328 feet (100 m) |
Surface | Kentucky Bluegrass |
Construction | |
Broke ground | August 30, 2007 (August 30, 2007) |
Opened | April 12, 2010 (April 12, 2010) |
Construction cost | US$555 million[7] |
Architect | Populous (formerly HOK Sport) Hammel, Green and Abrahamson |
Project manager | International Facilities Group, LLC.[8] |
Structural engineer | Walter P Moore Engineers and Consultants[9] |
Services engineer | M-E Engineers, Inc.[10] |
General contractor | Mortenson/Thor[11] |
Tenants | |
Minnesota Twins (MLB) (2010–present) Minnesota Golden Gophers (NCAA) (2011) |
|
Website | |
http://www.mlb.com/twins/ballpark/ |