Planning and funding On September 5, 1991, Pittsburgh mayor
Sophie Masloff proposed a new 44,000-seat stadium for the
Pittsburgh Pirates on the city's North Side. Discussions about a new ballpark took place, but were never seriously considered until entrepreneur
Kevin McClatchy purchased the team in February 1996. Until McClatchy's purchase, plans about the team remaining in Pittsburgh were uncertain. In 1996, Masloff's successor,
Tom Murphy, created the "Forbes Field II Task Force". Made up of 29 political and business leaders, the team studied the challenges of constructing a new ballpark. Their final report, published on June 26, 1996, evaluated 13 possible locations. The "North Side site" was recommended due to its affordable cost, potential to develop the surrounding area, and opportunity to incorporate the city skyline into the stadium's design. After a political debate, public money was used to fund PNC Park. Originally, a
sales tax increase was proposed to fund three projects: PNC Park, Heinz Field (home of the Steelers, now called
Acrisure Stadium), and an expansion of the
David L. Lawrence Convention Center. That proposal was soundly rejected in a 1997
referendum known as the Regional Renaissance Initiative. The city then developed
Plan B, which proved similarly controversial. It was labeled
Scam B by opponents who said it would consume too much public money; one member of the
Allegheny Regional Asset District board called the use of tax dollars "
corporate welfare" while others said the Pirates should contribute more than their pledged $40 million. Still, the board approved Plan B on July 9, 1998; it included $228 million for PNC Park in a total package of $809 million. Shortly thereafter, the Pirates made a deal with Pittsburgh city officials to remain in the city until at least 2031. Under the agreement,
PNC Bank paid the Pirates about $2 million each year through 2020; it also maintains a full-service PNC branch at the stadium. The total cost of PNC Park was $216 million.
Design and construction Kansas City-based
Populous (then HOK Sport), which designed many other major league ballparks of the late 20th and early 21st century, designed the ballpark. The design and construction management team consisted of the Dick Corporation and Barton Malow. PNC Park was the first two-deck ballpark to be built in the United States since
Milwaukee County Stadium opened in
1953. The out-of-town scoreboard was disabled for the 2022 season and replaced with advertising. After significant fan outcry, the decision was reversed, and the out-of-town scoreboard was returned in 2023. in honor of the former Pirate. Ground was broken for PNC Park on April 7, 1999, after a ceremony to christen the newly renamed Roberto Clemente Bridge. As part of original plans to create an enjoyable experience for fans, the bridge is closed to vehicular traffic on game days to allow spectators to park in
Pittsburgh's Golden Triangle and walk across the bridge to the stadium. PNC Park was built with
Kasota limestone shipped from a
Minnesota river valley, to contrast the brick bases of other modern stadiums. The American-made raw steel for the ballpark was fabricated in
Brownsville, Pennsylvania, by Wilhelm and Krus. The stadium was constructed over a 24-month span—at the time of construction, three months faster than any other modern major league ballpark—and the Pirates played their first game less than two years after groundbreaking. The quick construction was accomplished with the use of special computers, which relayed building plans to builders 24 hours per day. was later moved to a location outside Three Rivers Stadium.
Clemente's statue, installed outside Three Rivers Stadium in 1994, is shaped like a
baseball diamond; glass "bases" hold dirt from three of the fields Clemente played at. Both were moved to PNC Park after Three Rivers Stadium was demolished. On October 1, 2000, after the final game at Three Rivers Stadium, Stargell threw out the ceremonial last pitch. He was presented with a model of a statue that was to be erected in his honor outside PNC Park.
Stargell's statue was unveiled on April 7, 2001; however, Stargell did not attend due to health problems and died of a stroke two days later. A
statue for Mazeroski was added at the right field entrance, at the south end of Mazeroski Way, during the
2010 season. This was the 50th anniversary of the Pirates'
1960 World Series championship, which Mazeroski clinched with a Game 7 walk-off home run at Forbes Field. The statue itself is based on that event.
Opening and reception across the Allegheny River The Pirates opened PNC Park with two exhibition games against the
New York Mets—the first of which was played on March 31, 2001. The first official baseball game played in PNC Park was between the
Cincinnati Reds and the Pirates, on April 9, 2001. The Reds won the game by the final score of 8–2. The first pitch—a ball—was thrown from Pittsburgh's
Todd Ritchie to
Barry Larkin. In the top of the first inning, Pittsburgh native
Sean Casey's two-run home run was the first hit in the park. The first Pirates' batter,
Adrian Brown, struck out; however, later in the inning
Jason Kendall singled—the first hit by a Pirate in their new stadium. though it would drop about 27% the following season to 22,594 spectators per game. Throughout the
2001 season, businesses in downtown and on the Northside of Pittsburgh showed a 20–25% increase in business on Pirate game days. Pirates' vice-president Steve Greenberg said, "We said when construction began that we would build the best ballpark in baseball, and we believe we've done that." Jason Kendall, Pittsburgh's catcher at the opening of the park, called PNC Park "the most beautiful ballpark in the game". Different elements of PNC Park were used in the design of New York's
Citi Field. . Upon opening in 2001, PNC Park was praised by fans and media alike.
ESPN.com writer
Jim Caple ranked PNC Park as the best stadium in Major League Baseball, with a score of 95 out of 100. Caple compared the park to
Frank Lloyd Wright's
Fallingwater, calling the stadium itself "perfect", and citing high ticket prices as the only negative aspect of visiting the park. Eric Enders, author of
Ballparks Then and Now and co-author of
Big League Ballparks: The Complete Illustrated History, said it was "everything a baseball stadium could hope to be" and "an immediate contender for the title of best baseball park ever built". In 2008, ''
Men's Fitness'' named the park one of "10 big league parks worth seeing this summer". A 2010 unranked list of "America's 7 Best Ballparks" published by
ABC News noted that PNC Park "combines the best features of yesterday's ballparks—rhythmic archways, steel trusswork and a natural grass playing field—with the latest in fan and player amenities and comfort". In 2017, a panel of
Washington Post sports writers ranked it the 2nd-best stadium in MLB.
Alterations An exhibit honoring Pittsburgh's
Negro league baseball teams was introduced in 2006. Located by the stadium's left-field entrance, the display features statues of seven players who competed for the city's
Homestead Grays and
Pittsburgh Crawfords, including
Josh Gibson and
Satchel Paige. The exhibit also includes the Legacy Theatre, a 25-seat facility that plays a film about Pittsburgh's history with the Negro leagues. The Pirates donated the statues to the Josh Gibson Foundation in 2015. In 2007,
Allegheny County passed a
ban on smoking in most public places, thus making PNC Park completely smoke-free. Before the
2008 season, the Pirates made multiple alterations to PNC Park. The biggest change was removing the
Outback Steakhouse located in the left field stands, and adding a new restaurant known as
The Hall of Fame Club. Unlike its predecessor,
The Hall of Fame Club is open to all ticket-holders on game days; The Pirates feature bands in
The Hall of Fame Club after the completion of select games—the first performance was by
Joe Grushecky and the Houserockers. In addition, club and suite sections were outfitted with new televisions. Before the 2017 season, the manual out-of-town scoreboard on the right-field wall was replaced by an LED screen. Improvements for the 2022 season included the replacement of several rows of seats in center field and the security booth located next to the batter's eye by two open-air bars, where fans can watch the game while ordering drinks. A pirate-ship-themed playground for kids was added in this area, along with signs and plaques detailing the club's history and five championships. Outside the park, the Pirates added a display near the Center Field entrance commemorating the team's retired numbers, and large baseballs along the Allegheny River bearing the names of Pittsburgh-based members of the
Baseball Hall of Fame, including players from the local
Negro league franchises, the
Homestead Grays and
Pittsburgh Crawfords. In September 2022, the Pirates unveiled their own Hall of Fame, located in the Legacy Square area of the ballpark near the left field rotunda. The inaugural class featured 15 members. Ahead of the 2023 season, the Pirates replaced and expanded the main scoreboard. ==Notable events==