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Address | 19 Tony Gwynn Drive |
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Location | San Diego, California |
Coordinates | 32°42′26″N 117°09′24″W / 32.7073°N 117.1566°W / 32.7073; -117.1566 |
Public transit | 12th & Imperial Gaslamp Quarter |
Owner | City of San Diego: 70% San Diego Padres: 30% |
Operator | Padres LP |
Executive suites | 75[1][2] |
Capacity | 39,860 (since 2024)[3] 39,909 (2022–2023)[4] 40,019 (2020–2021)[5] 40,204 (2019)[6] 40,209 (2017–2018)[7] 40,162 (2016)[8] 41,164 (2015)[9] 42,302 (2014)[10] 42,524 (2013)[11] 42,691 (2008–2012)[12] 42,445 (2004–2007)[13] |
Record attendance | Baseball: 47,773 (Oct 9, 2024)[14] Concert: 79,123 (September 17 and 18, 2022)[15] |
Field size | Left field Line – 334 feet (102 m) Left field – 357 feet (109 m) Left field alley – 390 feet (119 m) Center field – 396 feet (121 m) Right field alley – 391 feet (119 m) Right field – 382 feet (116 m) Right field line – 322 feet (98 m) |
Surface | BullsEye Bermuda (Grass) |
Construction | |
Broke ground | May 3, 2000 (May 3, 2000)[16] |
Opened | April 8, 2004 (April 8, 2004) |
Construction cost | US$450 million ($726 million in 2023 Dollars[17]) |
Architect | Populous (then HOK Sport) Antoine Predock (design) Spurlock Poirier (landscape) ROMA (urban planning) Heritage Architecture & Planning (Historic Preservation) |
Project manager | JMI Sports, LLC.[18] |
Structural engineer | Thornton Tomasetti[19] |
Services engineer | M–E Engineers, Inc.[20] |
General contractor | San Diego BallPark Builders (a joint venture of Clark Construction, LLC, Nielsen Dillingham Builders Inc. and Douglas E. Barnhart Inc.) |
Tenants | |
San Diego Padres (MLB) (2004–present) Holiday Bowl (NCAA) (2021–2023) |
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|
Address | 19 Tony Gwynn Drive |
---|---|
Location | San Diego, California |
Coordinates | 32°42′26″N 117°09′24″W / 32.7073°N 117.1566°W / 32.7073; -117.1566 |
Public transit | 12th & Imperial Gaslamp Quarter |
Owner | City of San Diego: 70% San Diego Padres: 30% |
Operator | Padres LP |
Executive suites | 75[1][2] |
Capacity | 39,860 (since 2024)[3] 39,909 (2022–2023)[4] 40,019 (2020–2021)[5] 40,204 (2019)[6] 40,209 (2017–2018)[7] 40,162 (2016)[8] 41,164 (2015)[9] 42,302 (2014)[10] 42,524 (2013)[11] 42,691 (2008–2012)[12] 42,445 (2004–2007)[13] |
Record attendance | Baseball: 47,773 (Oct 9, 2024)[14] Concert: 79,123 (September 17 and 18, 2022)[15] |
Field size | Left field Line – 334 feet (102 m) Left field – 357 feet (109 m) Left field alley – 390 feet (119 m) Center field – 396 feet (121 m) Right field alley – 391 feet (119 m) Right field – 382 feet (116 m) Right field line – 322 feet (98 m) |
Surface | BullsEye Bermuda (Grass) |
Construction | |
Broke ground | May 3, 2000 (May 3, 2000)[16] |
Opened | April 8, 2004 (April 8, 2004) |
Construction cost | US$450 million ($726 million in 2023 Dollars[17]) |
Architect | Populous (then HOK Sport) Antoine Predock (design) Spurlock Poirier (landscape) ROMA (urban planning) Heritage Architecture & Planning (Historic Preservation) |
Project manager | JMI Sports, LLC.[18] |
Structural engineer | Thornton Tomasetti[19] |
Services engineer | M–E Engineers, Inc.[20] |
General contractor | San Diego BallPark Builders (a joint venture of Clark Construction, LLC, Nielsen Dillingham Builders Inc. and Douglas E. Barnhart Inc.) |
Tenants | |
San Diego Padres (MLB) (2004–present) Holiday Bowl (NCAA) (2021–2023) |