Wooden ballparks The first professional baseball venues were large
wooden ballparks with seats mounted on wood platforms. Although known for being constructed out of wood, they featured iron columns for better support. Some included one tier of inclined seating, topped with either a flat roof or, in some instances, a small upper tier. The outfield was bordered by tall walls or fences covered in advertisements, much like today's minor league parks. These advertisements were sometimes fronted with bleacher seats, or "bleaching boards". Wood, while prone to decomposition, was a relatively inexpensive material. However, the use of wood as the primary material presented a major problem, especially as baseball continued to thrive. Over time, the wooden stands aged and dried. Many parks caught fire, and some were leveled completely. This problem, along with the popularization of baseball and expectations for long-term use of the parks were major factors that drove the transition to the new standard materials for ballparks: steel and concrete. Some famous wooden parks, such as the
Polo Grounds III in New York and
National League Park in Philadelphia, burned and were rebuilt with fire-resistant materials (Polo Grounds IV and Baker Bowl). Others were simply abandoned in favor of new structures built elsewhere. These new fire-resistant parks often lasted for many decades, and (retrospectively) came to be known as "jewel boxes". There are no more professional ballparks in existence left with this architectural trend, with the last one, Oriole Park V, burning down in 1944.
Jewel box ballparks is the oldest active ballpark in
Major League Baseball. The famed
Green Monster is the left field fence. The earliest ballparks built or rebuilt of
reinforced concrete, brick, and steel are now known as the
jewel box ballparks or
classic parks. Two-tiered grandstands became much more prevalent in this era, as well. The
Baker Bowl in Philadelphia, which opened in 1895, was the first to use steel and brick as the primary construction materials and included a
cantilevered upper deck seating area that hung out over the lower seating area. Although it did not use reinforced concrete in its construction, Baker Bowl is considered the first of the jewel box parks. The first to use reinforced concrete was
Shibe Park, which opened in 1909, also in Philadelphia. The upper decks were typically held up by steel pillars that obstructed the view from some seats in the lower level. However, because of the supports used, the upper decks could come very close to the field. The two-tiered design was the standard for decades, until the
New York Yankees built
Yankee Stadium. To accommodate the large crowds
Babe Ruth drew, Yankee Stadium was built with three tiers. This became the new standard until some recently built parks reverted to two, including PNC Park in 2001. Most jewel box parks were built to fit the constraints of actual city blocks, often resulting in significantly asymmetrical outfield dimensions and large outfield walls to prevent easy home runs. Notable examples included
League Park in Cleveland, which had a -tall wall in right field, and the
Green Monster, the -tall left field wall at
Fenway Park in Boston. Notable exceptions include Shibe Park and
Comiskey Park, which were built on rectangular city blocks that were large enough to accommodate symmetrical left and right fields. Other sports, such as
soccer and
football, were often played at these sites (Yankee Stadium, for example, was designed to accommodate football). In contrast to the later multi-purpose parks, the seats were generally angled in a configuration suitable for baseball. The "retro" ballparks built in the 1990s and beyond are an attempt to capture the feel of the jewel box parks. The only jewel box parks still used by Major League Baseball are Fenway Park and
Wrigley Field.
Major League Baseball (MLB) Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB) Multi-purpose stadiums , From the 1960s until the arrival of retro parks in 1992, baseball built many
multi-purpose ballparks. Also derisively known as "concrete donuts", "cookie-cutters", or "giant ashtrays", they were usually tall and circular or square structures made entirely of, usually bare, reinforced concrete. The parks were built to hold baseball, but also were able to host other sports, such as football and soccer. One of the earliest baseball stadiums that incorporated this type of design was
Cleveland Stadium (built 1932), which featured an oval grandstand that was more friendly to goal-centered sports like football. A park built to suit all sports well, which was co-owned by the teams or the city, seemed advantageous to all, especially because it was less expensive to maintain one stadium rather than two. Some parks that were originally built for one sport were renovated to accommodate multiple sports. The shape of the parks generally depended on the original use. Ballparks that were renovated to accommodate football, like
Candlestick Park and
Anaheim Stadium, were usually asymmetrically shaped. Football stadiums that were renovated to accommodate baseball, like
Sun Life Stadium and
Mile High Stadium, were usually of a rectangular shape, though Mile High actually started its life in 1948 as a
Minor League Baseball park known as Bears Stadium. Parks that were built to serve both were usually circular and completely enclosed on all sides. These were the parks that gained multi-purpose parks the reputation as bland cookie-cutter structures. The first of these parks was
DC Stadium (renamed RFK Stadium in 1969) in the
District of Columbia. RFK is unique in that it hosted two different baseball
teams, and that it was the first to
originally be intended for multiple sports. A notable variant among the cookie-cutter stadia was
Shea Stadium. Its grandstand extended just beyond the foul poles and did not completely enclose the field. Plans were made to enclose the grandstand and build a dome, but engineers discovered that the structure could not handle the load of the proposed dome. Thus, the area behind the outfield fence remained open. One major innovation of the multi-purpose parks was the
cantilevered upper deck. In earlier ballparks, the columns used to support the upper decks obstructed the view from some seats in the lower deck. In the new design, the upper decks were extended upwards and the columns were removed. However, even though the extension counterbalanced some of the weight, the upper decks could no longer extend as close to the field and had to be moved back. Also, the roofs could no longer be as large, and often only covered the top 15 or so rows. This exposed fans to the elements. Besides the drawbacks of the cantilever design, there were other issues with these parks. With few exceptions, seating was angled to face the center of the field of play, rather than home plate. The furthest seats in these parks were or more from the plate. The capacities of these stadiums were larger than previous baseball stadiums. Typical game attendance did not fill the stadiums. Due to the rectangular shape needed for football or soccer, outfield dimensions were generally symmetrical, and even seats at field level down the lines could be far from the action. Multi-purpose stadiums also posed issues for their non-baseball tenants. The "cookie-cutters" with swiveling, field-level sections proved problematic. Because the front rows were too close to the field, the fans had difficulty seeing over the football benches. This was evident in the
movable seating sections in RFK Stadium. The first ten rows of the football configuration were practically at field level, and fans in those sections often stood up on their seats to get a better view. Other stadiums overcame this simply by covering those seats, not bothering to sell them. Despite being cost-effective, these problems eventually caused the parks to become unfashionable. The multi-purpose architecture reached a climax when Toronto's SkyDome (now
Rogers Centre) opened in 1989. It had state-of-the-art amenities including a retractable roof, hotel, and a restaurant behind the outfield from where patrons could view the games. Rogers Centre was renovated into a baseball only stadium from 2022 to 2024. There are no more purely open-air multi-purpose parks still in use today, with the
Oakland Coliseum having been the last one in use. The Athletics moved out of Oakland Coliseum in 2024 and will play at
West Sacramento's
Sutter Health Park for three seasons as a
new dedicated facility of their own is built in Las Vegas. Their former co-tenants, the NFL
Oakland Raiders,
moved to Las Vegas in 2020 and into
Allegiant Stadium. • A baseball-only ballpark converted to a multi-purpose stadium. • A football-only stadium converted to a multi-purpose stadium. denotes stadium is also a retractable-roof / indoor stadium
Indoor ballparks , currently the only active indoor-only MLB ballpark An important type of ballpark is the
indoor park. These parks are covered with a fixed roof, usually a hard concrete dome. The reasons to build indoor parks are varied. The
Astrodome, the first indoor sports stadium ever built, was built to escape the hot and very humid climate of Houston and the
Kingdome was built to escape Seattle's constant fall and winter rains. In Japan, domed stadiums were built to escape frequently rainy climates, as well as extreme snowfall in Sapporo. There is little to no natural light in these parks, necessitating the use of one of the most distinguishing aspects of an indoor park: artificial turf. While technology now allows for grass to be used in indoor venues (see
Forsyth Barr Stadium, a rugby venue in New Zealand with an
ETFE roof allowing grass to be grown indoors, or NFL stadiums like
State Farm Stadium and
Allegiant Stadium, which allow the grass field to be grown outside and then rolled indoors for games), the first generation of indoor parks predated such abilities. Since there was not enough light to grow grass, artificial turf is installed, and this affected the game. Artificial turf is harder, and thus a ball hit on the ground moves faster and bounces higher. This, coupled with the usually dull white or gray roofs that could camouflage a fly ball, causing what Twins fans called a "dome-field advantage". A park of note is
Olympic Stadium in Montreal. The park was designed with a large tower that loomed over top. Cables came down from the top of the tower to connect to the large oval center of the roof. This oval center was supposed to be lifted by the cables, opening the park up if the weather was pleasant. However, the mechanism never worked correctly, and what was supposed to be a retractable roof was initially not used, then used for only a short period of time, and later replaced with a permanently fixed roof, making the stadium a strictly indoor facility. Another notable park was the
Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome in
Minneapolis, which instead of a rigid masonry roof was covered by inflatable fiberglass sheeting, held up by air pressure. A drawback to this design, at least in Minnesota's severe winter climate, was revealed when the dome collapsed three times in its first three years of operation due to accumulated snow. The
Tokyo Dome has a similar roof; due to Tokyo's considerably milder winter climate, that stadium has not had the Metrodome's snow-related issues. The first generation of indoor parks faced many of the same problems of the multi-purpose parks.
Tropicana Field is the only indoor-only or fixed-dome park built specifically for baseball and the only one left hosting a Major League Baseball team, and is scheduled to be replaced in the near future. The
new ballpark for the
Las Vegas Athletics is slated to have a fixed roof with a window to allow natural light in, like Allegiant Stadium. Japan still has several fixed-dome parks designed primarily for baseball. One of these, the
Sapporo Dome, features two separate playing surfaces. Baseball is played on a permanently installed artificial surface within the dome, while a permanent grass pitch is attached to the structure and mechanically slid into the dome for use in
soccer matches.
MLB NPB Modern ballparks While most teams turned to multi-purpose parks, some built baseball-only parks. While these
modern ballparks shirked some of the conventions of multi-purpose parks, they did include some of the new features. The most notable influences were the cantilevered upper decks, the use of seating colors other than green, fairly plain concrete exteriors, and symmetrical outfields. While the multi-purpose parks have become all but extinct, some modern parks, such as
Dodger Stadium and
Kauffman Stadium, have been hailed for aging beautifully. Rather than build new parks, the teams have decided instead to renovate the current structures, adding a few newer conveniences. Several of the modern parks built as such have remained in use, with no indication of being demolished. While Cleveland Stadium is the ancestor to the multi-purpose ballpark, the ancestor of the modern ballpark is
Milwaukee County Stadium. It was the first to feature a symmetrical, round outfield fence. It also featured the rounded V-shaped grandstand and colorful seats that are common among modern parks. Coincidentally, it would have been one of the earlier examples of a converted park as well. It was supposed to replace a minor league facility, and serve as home of the minor league team until a major league franchise could be lured to the city. However, the Braves came to Milwaukee earlier than expected, and the minor league team never played in the stadium. The first two truly modern ballparks were built by the two New York teams who moved to California, the Giants and the Dodgers.
Candlestick Park was created first, but was converted to a multi-purpose park to accommodate the
49ers. Dodger Stadium has been upgraded a number of times, but remains baseball-only and its original design is still largely intact. Anaheim Stadium, which was initially modeled closely on Dodger Stadium, was expanded for football, but once the Rams departed, most of the extra outfield seating was peeled back, returning the structure to something closer to its original design. The original Yankee Stadium is an exceptional case. Yankee Stadium was originally built as a jewel box park, albeit a very large one. It was showing its age in the 1970s, and the stadium was extensively renovated during 1973–1975, converting it into more of a modern style ballpark. Many of the characteristics that defined it as a classical jewel box were retained, so the remodeled Stadium straddled both categories.
Rogers Centre, which has a retractable roof and
Tropicana Field, which has a fixed roof, can also be considered modern ballparks. Originally built as a multi-purpose stadium, Rogers Centre has been renovated as a baseball only park, while Tropicana Field was built with the intent to attract an MLB team to the Tampa Bay area. New Comiskey Park (now
Rate Field) was the last modern ballpark to be built in North America. A series of renovations have been made to make it appear more like a retro-classic ballpark. Although they were purposefully built for baseball, some of these stadiums also hosted professional soccer and football teams at times. The
Minnesota Vikings played at Metropolitan Stadium during the Twins' entire tenure there, and the
Green Bay Packers played a few home games at Milwaukee County Stadium every year from 1953 through 1994. A few of them, including Metropolitan Stadium, also hosted
NASL teams during the 1970s. The only modern parks still used by Major League Baseball are
Dodger Stadium,
Angel Stadium,
Kauffman Stadium,
Rate Field,
Rogers Centre and
Tropicana Field, although Rate Field has been renovated into a Retro-classic ballpark while Angel Stadium and Kauffman Stadium have been renovated into Retro-modern ballparks; Tropicana Field, Rate Field and Kauffman Stadium are planned to be replaced with new ballparks in the near future. denotes stadium is also a retractable-roof / indoor ballpark
Retractable-roof ballparks is the first functional retractable-roof stadium, shown with the roof both opened and closed. The indoor parks were built for several different reasons, chief among those weather. However, as multi-purpose parks became unfashionable, so did indoor parks. This led to the creation of
retractable-roof parks. These allowed shelter from the elements, but still could be open when the weather was pleasant. To be able to support the roof, most were closed in on all sides like multi-purpose and indoor parks. Because the roof needs to go somewhere when not covering the field, a distinguishing characteristic of the retractable roof park is a large extension of the interior spaces to either one side of the field or both sides that the roof sits on when retracted. The only exception to this is
American Family Field, whose fan-shaped roof folds in upon itself and hangs behind the stands down the foul lines. Often, when retracted, the roof still hangs over the field, casting large shadows. This is countered at American Family Field by large panes of glass under the roof. While most stadiums seal up when the roof is closed, others remain partially open, such as
T-Mobile Park, whose roof acts as an "umbrella" to shield from Seattle's frequently rainy weather. Pittsburgh's
Civic Arena was the first sports building in the world with a retractable roof; however, the building was originally constructed for the
Pittsburgh Civic Light Opera, which moved out in 1969 due to dissatisfaction with the acoustics in the arena. The arena's long-term tenants, the NHL's
Pittsburgh Penguins, never played with the roof open, and the arena itself was never used for baseball (and was too small to be used for that sport). While Montreal's Olympic Stadium was the first baseball park to have a retractable roof, the roof was plagued by numerous problems, and was never fully used. This made Rogers Centre the first fully functional retractable-roof park. It managed to succeed where Olympic Stadium failed, building a multi-section roof that folded upon itself, retracting over the hotel in center field. Retractable-roof parks can vary greatly in style, from the utilitarian (
Rogers Centre), to those infused with retro elements (such as
Daikin Park), to the contemporary (
loanDepot Park). The style of each park reflects the popular architecture of the era in which it was built. (This differs from indoor ballparks, all of which were built during the time of multi-purpose parks, and thus reflected the same "flying-saucer" style.) When
Rogers Centre opened in 1989, baseball was near the end of the modern and multi-purpose era.
Chase Field,
T-Mobile Park,
Daikin Park, and
American Family Field all opened in the middle of the retro era. When loanDepot Park opened in 2012 as Marlins Park, it introduced a new and different style, and perhaps the beginning of a new era. The
Texas Rangers built
Globe Life Field in the retro style similar to their previous ballpark,
Globe Life Park. Therefore, the term "retractable-roof ballpark/stadium" is not a description of the overall architectural style of the building, but of the functional aspect of it. For this reason, retractable-roof parks are also dual-listed in style-based types of ballparks. For example, the four retractable-roof parks built in the United States during the retro era are also considered to be retro-modern ballparks.
MLB NPB Retro-classic ballparks started the nostalgic craze with a smaller, red brick and forest green stadium. HOK Sport, now known as
Populous, designed
Sahlen Field in
Buffalo to attract a major league franchise to the city. The stadium opened in 1988 as home of the
Buffalo Bisons, but was passed over in the
1993 Major League Baseball expansion (Sahlen Field was eventually used as a temporary MLB facility by the
Toronto Blue Jays in the
2020 season and
2021 season due to Canada's travel restrictions following the outbreak of
COVID-19). HOK Sport would take what they learned in Buffalo about styling a
retro-classic ballpark, or
retro/jewel box ballpark, to their major league project in Baltimore. In 1992,
Oriole Park at Camden Yards opened in
Baltimore in a similar style and colour to a jewel box park, but with more features and accommodations. The ballpark also has a modern, stepped-deck layout, columns removed, and fencing changed. Since Camden Yards opened, two-thirds of all major league teams have opened new ballparks, each of which contain unique features. The most important feature was that they were built primarily for baseball, although these venues have also hosted football, soccer and
ice hockey games.
Turner Field was originally constructed as
Centennial Olympic Stadium for the
1996 Summer Olympics and was retrofitted to baseball the following year.
Rate Field was the last modern park built in 1991 and was viewed as obsolete a year after opening. The White Sox responded with a series of retro-classic style renovations, such as roofing changes, asymmetrical fencing, and a dark green colour scheme. Upper deck seating was also reduced to eliminate less purchased seating locations. The most recent retro-classic ballparks were built in New York City. Queens'
Citi Field is modeled after
Ebbets Field, and the Bronx's
Yankee Stadium is modeled after the pre-renovation "
House that Ruth Built". Both parks opened in 2009. Teams are now trending away from the retro-classic look and are instead building retro-modern and contemporary ballparks. Turner Field was the first retro-classic park replaced, as the
Atlanta Braves moved to
Truist Park in 2017, while the
Texas Rangers moved from
Globe Life Park in Arlington to the retractable-roof
Globe Life Field in 2020. Rate Field is planned to be replaced with a
new ballpark in the near future.
Retro-modern ballparks was the first retro park with a modern exterior. While Camden Yards influenced nearly every ballpark built after it, not all fully adhere to its design. Those that deviate to incorporate more modern-looking elements are called
retro-modern ballparks.
Progressive Field, originally Jacobs Field, was built two years after Camden Yards, and featured the angular, asymmetrical fences of varying heights, a smaller upper deck, stepped tiers, and an unobtrusive singular color scheme. While the interior has all the hallmarks of a retro park, the exterior did not feature the look of the jewel box parks. It could not truly be called a retro-classic park. Many of today's parks have followed in this second school of retro. Rather than brick, the exteriors heavily feature white- or gray-painted steel. If there is any masonry, it is sandstone or limestone. Some feature progressive elements such as curtain walls, or retractable roofs.
Angel Stadium has seen many changes throughout the years. It was originally a modern park, similar to the Angels' previous home,
Dodger Stadium. When the
NFL's
Los Angeles Rams left the
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in 1980 and set up shop in what was then Anaheim Stadium, the first round of renovations began. The grandstand was expanded to completely enclose the stadium, turning it into a multi-purpose park. The Rams left in 1994, leaving the Angels alone in the large, 65,000-seat stadium. After a two-year renovation, the steel was painted green, and what concrete remained was painted sandstone, including the sweeping curve of the entrance plaza. The seating configuration was significantly altered, most notably by tearing out most of the outfield seating except for parts of the lower decks in left and right fields, to more closely resemble the original design from the park's first 15 years. The finished product in 1998 was a retro-modern ballpark. In the same year,
Chase Field opened as Bank One Ballpark for the expansion
Arizona Diamondbacks, it incorporated a retractable roof and a swimming pool—elements that did not exist in jewel-box ballparks. Despite the absence of MLB history in the
Phoenix area and an overwhelming roof design, much of the interior was still built with all of the hallmarks of retro, similar to
Progressive Field. Although Chase Field was not the
first retractable-roof ballpark in history, it was the first in a wave of four retractable-roof ballparks (opening within just four years) to follow the retro-modern pattern. During the second decade of retro,
Petco Park and
Kauffman Stadium followed the construction and renovation concepts of
Progressive Field and
Angel Stadium, respectively. Meanwhile, the period saw another subset of three new retro-modern stadiums that pushed away from classic parks even more. When
Great American Ball Park opened in 2003, it featured a contemporary-looking, glass-wrapped facade. Such prominent use of elements that were unfamiliar even to pre-1992 modern stadiums signaled that some stadium planners were more willing to incorporate designs that looked into the 21st century as much as they did the 20th. Five years later,
Nationals Park built off Cincinnati's design, making yet more liberal use of glass along with white concrete that would not clash with architecture in
the District. Nationals Park became the first stadium to
go green while still offering all of the amenities—another concept that looked ahead instead of behind. The retro-modern style climaxed in 2010 with the sculptured, contemporary exterior and canopy of
Target Field, rendering it almost unrecognizable from the outside. Its cantilevered glass on top of a limestone base was designed partly to functionally fit the tiny 8-acre plot in the middle of a bustling transportation interchange. But the principal architect of Target Field, Earl Santee of
Populous, said that the exterior was also an artistic interpretation of the culture of Minnesotans: a dichotomy of cosmopolitan and natural. Designing the building as a metaphor for people was a different way of thinking about ballpark architecture. Subsequent retro-contemporary ballparks transitioned away from the architectural characteristics of both jewel-box and modern-style stadiums. While these venues incorporate contemporary amenities and field layouts, they maintain traditional aesthetic elements. Characteristic retro-style features include asymmetrical outfield fences and monochromatic color schemes, frequently utilizing forest green. After two decades of the retro style dominating ballpark architecture, a new type of design emerged in 2012 with the opening of the venue now known as
LoanDepot Park, snapping the consecutive streak of 20 new (plus 3 renovated) MLB retro stadiums. This latest style's purpose is to make the fan experience the present-day culture of the stadium's surrounding city or area, and rejects the basic notion of retro. Stadium planners are calling the style
contemporary. The New Yorker wrote regarding the new MLB architecture: "The retro mold has finally been broken, but this might be the last chance a new style gets for some time."
Es Con Field Hokkaido, a ballpark in a similar style built for the
Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters of
Nippon Professional Baseball, opened in 2023. The
new ballpark for the
Las Vegas Athletics was purposely designed to fit into the atmosphere of the surrounding
Las Vegas Strip.
MLB NPB denotes stadium is also a retractable-roof / indoor ballpark
Temporary and converted ballparks , the oval-shaped
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum became the temporary home of the relocated Dodgers in 1958. The expansion teams of the 1960s led to the emergence of two distinct subsets of parks in the major leagues:
temporary ballparks and
converted ballparks. Temporary ballparks were used when a new ballpark was planned for an expansion team or moving franchise, but was not completed. This occurred for a few reasons, such as delays or a desire to hold off until the deal is settled. In this case, an established building is used as a temporary home, often a minor league park. The first temporary ballparks were not actually used by expansion teams but by established franchises. When the Dodgers and Giants moved to California from New York, they played in Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum and Seals Stadium respectively while Dodger Stadium and Candlestick Park were being built. Converted ballparks were an alternative to building an entirely new stadium. These parks were pre-existing minor league or college facility that were expanded to fit a major league team. Converted ballparks are distinct from football stadia that were converted to multi-purpose parks in that converted ballparks were originally built for baseball only, albeit for a non-major league level. Early converted ballparks were Memorial Stadium in Baltimore, Municipal Stadium in Kansas City, and Metropolitan Stadium in Bloomington, Minnesota. All three were expanded minor league facilities, although Baltimore and the Met were constructed with the idea of expanding to major league level in mind. Kansas City was a true established minor league park that was substantially expanded to accommodate major league size crowds. Temporary ballparks made a comeback in 2020, when Sahlen Field was used as a temporary MLB facility by the
Toronto Blue Jays in the
2020 season and
2021 season due to Canada's travel restrictions following the outbreak of
COVID-19, which prevented them from playing in the
Rogers Centre. Sutter Health Park is the temporary home of the
Athletics from 2025 to 2027 leading up to the franchise's
move to
Las Vegas. After extensive damage to
Tropicana Field by
Hurricane Milton, it was announced that Steinbrenner Field will serve as the temporary home field for the
Tampa Bay Rays during their
2025 season. These two types of ballpark are distinct because of their use, not their design. Because of this, a temporary or converted ballpark can also be any of the other types: jewel box, modern, multi-purpose, etc.
Note: Only temporary ballparks that were used for an entire MLB season and more are listed. All converted ballparks are listed. Major League Baseball (MLB) Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB) ==See also==