
Rendering of Citi Field, Flushing Meadows, Queens, New York, projected completion 2009
The 2008 baseball season begins this week. By coincidence, this will be the last season that New York's two teams, the Yankees and Mets, play in their current stadiums. Next year, both teams will move into brand-new venues that will include state-of-the-art amenities, high-tech electronic displays, expensive VIP suite areas, and every modern convenience — on the inside, at least.
On the outside, both stadiums, like almost every baseball park built since 1992, will make every attempt to convince us that they were built sometime in the first part of the last century.
In the last 25 years, Americans have designed, built and enjoyed modern office buildings, modern libraries, modern museums, and modern houses. Why is it so hard to build a baseball stadium that looks like it belongs in the 21st century?
More than any other American sport, baseball is fueled by nostalgia. I have fond memories of rooting for the hapless Cleveland Indians in a remarkably hideous setting, the chilly and cavernous Cleveland Municipal Stadium. Built in 1931 with a seating capacity of nearly 80,000, the "Mistake by the Lake" routinely attracted fewer than 20,000 fans to see the likes of Sam McDowell, Steve Hargan and Rocky Colavito. But it had a lot more character than Cincinnati's cookie-cutter Riverfront Stadium, an airport-like facility built in 1970 where I would sit in alienated gloom during my college years watching the Big Red Machine roll over all comers amidst a smug crowd who expected no less.
For a long time, most new ballparks looked like Riverfront: Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium, St. Louis's Busch Stadium, Pittsburgh's Three Rivers, all charmless industrial facilities lacking any sense of place, specificity, or human scale. Then came Oriole Park at Camden Yards in Baltimore, and everything changed.
When it opened in 1992, Camden Yards was a revelation. Janet Marie Smith, the Orioles' Vice President for Planning and Development during the park's construction, had encouraged project architect HOK Sport to design an "old fashioned ballpark with modern amenities." As a result, in contrast to Memorial Park, the 1950 "concrete doughnut" stadium it replaced — but like beloved urban ballparks such as Wrigley Field or Fenway Park — Camden Yards was asymmetrically-shaped to conform to the idiosyncrasies of the neighborhood street pattern, and scaled to bring the fans close to the action. And the ballpark was old fashioned not only in spirit, but in the literal details; using a steel structural system that hadn't been used in stadiums since the 30s, and clad in brick to match the restored B&O Railroad warehouse across the street, it was designed to look as if it had been built in 1912, not seventy years later. Sponsors and advertisers were encouraged to use vintage logos, all the better to scrupulously maintain the illusion.
The illusion proved irresistible. Camden Yards was a hit with critics and fans alike, and it launched a trend in ballpark design that has continued unabated to this day. In the wake of Camden, retro facilities rose in Arlington, Denver, Atlanta, San Francisco, Detroit, Houston, Pittsburgh, San Diego, Philadelphia, St. Louis and Oakland. Cleveland Municipal Stadium was replaced by Jacobs Field in 1994. Cincinnati's Riverfront Stadium was replaced by Great American Ballpark in 2003. Both Jacobs (now Progressive Field, named for Progressive Insurance), and Great American (named for the Great American Insurance Group) were designed by the architects who started it all in Baltimore, HOK Sport. The firm has made the most of their success at Camden Yards; by 2012 they will have designed 19 of the 30 major league baseball fields.
Which brings us to my home town. HOK's portfolio includes our two newest ballparks, the new Yankee Stadium and the new home for the Mets, Citi Field. I can't say much about the design of Yankee Stadium. The House that Ruth Built is regarded by sports fans as a secular cathedral, and it goes without saying that the new facility, which is currently being built on a park adjacent to the current stadium, will replicate as many details as possible of the 1923 original. The weight of tradition is just too much.
The Mets, however, are different. I moved to New York in 1980, the perfect moment to become a Mets fan: the following years would see the arrival of Keith Hernadez, Ron Darling, Gary Carter, Darryl Strawberry and Dwight Gooden, culminating in the thrilling championship year of 1986. The setting of these heroics, however, was the dismal and unbeloved Shea Stadium, opened in 1964 as a home for the then two-year-old Mets. “There’s no redeeming architectural value in Shea,” the AIA's Fred Bell told the New York Times this weekend. “If Yankee Stadium is like visiting the Metropolitan Museum, then Shea is like a visit to the dentist’s chair.” Mets fans have been waiting a long time for a new ballpark.
And what are we getting? Well, this passage from the Mets website should sound familiar: "Inspired by tradition, Citi Field will be clad in brick, limestone, granite and cast stone, with the brick closely resembling the masonry used at Ebbets Field, both in color and texture. Exposed steel will be painted dark blue and the seats will be dark green." I find this all rather odd. Ebbets Field served as the home of an entirely different team, the Brooklyn Dodgers, until 1957. Camden Yards sits in the middle of Baltimore and picked up its design cues from its surrounding neighborhood. Citi Field sits in the middle of nowhere — Flushing Meadows, Queens — and it picks up its design cues from a ballpark that, before it was demolished nearly 50 years ago, was located nearly nine miles away.
But in reality Flushing Meadows is hardly the middle of nowhere, and has a potent design tradition of its own. Originally a city dumping ground memorialized as The Great Gatsby's "valley of ashes," it was cleared by parks commissioner Robert Moses for the 1939 New York World's Fair, and fifteen years later, the 1964 World's Fair. Its grounds were the site of some of the most iconic and entertaining visionary architecture ever built in North America: Wallace Harrison's Trylon and Perisphere, Norman Bel Geddes' Futurama at the General Motors Pavilion, not to mention the Unisphere, which still stands today within sight of the new Citi Field. Wouldn't any of these have made great precedents for a new pleasure dome to be built in Flushing Meadows? Or, to go a little further afield — but at least within the same borough — how about Queen's greatest piece of architecture, from the same year as Shea, no less: Eero Saarinen's TWA Terminal?
But instead, we have the fourteenth old-timey iteration of something that was an innovation a decade and a half ago, and now seems like nothing more than a default. HOK Sport is capable of bold, exciting architecture: just consider their Landsdowne Road Stadium in Dublin, Nanjing Olympic Sports Centre in China, or their work with Norman Foster at Wembley Stadium. The Mets are an atomic-age team, unburdened by the century of tradition that haunts their crosstown rivals. Their site is as close to a blank slate as anyone could imagine.
We all know that baseball fans love their nostalgic ballparks, and I certainly like the human scale and sense of place that the best of these venues provide. But do those values always have to arrive smothered in old fashioned wrappings? Sooner or later someone has to take a risk on something new. In Flushing Meadows, all the conditions were right to take a chance on a home run. What a pity we have to settle instead for a sacrifice bunt.
Comments [57]
03.31.08
06:11
03.31.08
06:37
03.31.08
06:57
It was profoundly disturbing to me that when the movement to save Yankee Stadium was still viable, the design community, and especially the Paper of Record, effectively stood aside. Complaints about the new park have been, for the most part, based on formalist criteria. That's sad.
For what it's worth, Petco Park, in San Diego, was designed by Antoine Predock (with the ubiquitous HOK), and largely eschews the nostalgic elements that characterize recent ballpark design. Several other relatively new ballparks (those in Denver, Pittsburgh, San Francisco spring to mind) warrant recognition for sensitive urban design.
03.31.08
07:26
03.31.08
07:55
03.31.08
08:37
03.31.08
09:10
03.31.08
10:29
In any case, nostalgia is boring unless you're the one strolling down memory. And even then, it gets dull after a while.
All the more reason to say, Good on DC!
03.31.08
10:42
04.01.08
12:40
04.01.08
04:36
While sports teams ranging from The Cowboys, to the Nets, to a few soccer teams in Europe are creating architecturally modern stadiums... baseball is at a standstill. I believe these modern teams and organizations see the future as the bright, green light with unlimited possibilities. Baseball views its rooted past as the green light, maybe this is why they so want to emulate it? Maybe they believe their best times have past and longingly want to hold on to that?
Or maybe everyone just wants a Fenway... and they think they can build it by pulling on some heart strings about the romantic past?
04.01.08
10:09
I suppose the pendulum of nostalgia will swing its way back at some point as we slowly tire of the sameness of the HOK model (built in quirks and all) and pine for the days of cold, cavernous stadiums with poor sightlines, bad food and nasty bathrooms, where there's nothing to do but watch the game. Or maybe that's just me.
04.01.08
10:36
...because I'm a designer and I deserve to see cool things, damn it!
Baseball is all about nostalgia and hokey feelings of what it felt like to go to games with your dad (or what you wish it felt like). Nostalgia sells, otherwise they wouldn't keep on doing it. The average baseball fan has no desire to go to a game in a modern spaceship setting, no matter how much you wish it were so.
04.01.08
11:32
04.01.08
11:39
Also, the seat section partitions were made of plexiglass instead of metal railings. I guess it was to trick patrons into thinking that a hockey game might break out at any moment.
04.01.08
12:03
I will get off my soap box here, but first would point out that in today's Times, Nicolai Ouroussoff bemoans the current state of development, in which we, "replace genuine urban history with a watered-down substitute. It’s historical censorship." That's true. But this is what he wrote in the Times in June of 1995, regarding the plans to replace Yankee Stadium. "There are those, no doubt, who will complain about the loss of the site of some of the most memorable moments in the history of sports. I am not one of them. The current stadium, which was severely altered in the mid-1970's, has little architectural merit."
04.01.08
12:17
04.01.08
12:34
The average fan. Aren't you quaint. The problem with baseball is that the average fan needs to feel some kind of kinship with his father. The average fan needs to be ordered by a Diamondvision screen to stand up and cheer for Cracker Jacks. The Average fan needs to have sushi delivered to his club seats. The average fan needs to eat a veggie dog in the family friendly confines of Ye Olde Pepitone Picinic Area. The average fan needs to hold on to their youth by stalking the ghosts of Wally Pip and Ted Kluszewski.
Maybe the average fan needs to watch the game for the game itself. In a spaceship. I saw many a lousy team play in Shea Stadium, a round, boring multi-purpose stadium. I saw many a lousy team play in the sterile, concrete confines of The Kingdome. Designer or not, I would rather watch the game in a in multi-purpose monstrosity than in a flannel coated tribute to the past. That way I can pay attention to the game and to the schlub sitting next to me squeezed into a polyester Roberto Clemente replica shroud.
04.01.08
02:18
One of the flaws of KC and in my experience with a newer stadium - the White Sox park in Chicago - is the context. These are situated in a sea of parking lots. The Chicago Stadium is flawed for many other reasons, but local groups pleaded with the developers to make it contextually appropriate by including housing and other developments across the street, and make it a walkable experience. This makes the Cubs' stadium such a joy: you can walk right up to it, and when inside see the neighborhood.
04.01.08
02:24
04.01.08
03:01
There is a polar approach to stadiums. Either have a retractable dome or lots of brick and asymmetry. The difference is Camden Yards had a concept that exceeded "make it look old with modern amenities." And in Baltimore there was an existing, natural, historically relevant element that is undeniably the second most recognizable element in any baseball stadium.
04.01.08
04:15
This posting is not to defend the trend, but rather to situate a rebuttal in the current and historical American zeitgeist. We, of all nationalities, crave stability; in a constantly rocking world, we cling to those design elements that are most comfortable and constant. I can think of no more comforting to Americans than baseball.
04.01.08
05:05
In the 70s, the cookie-cutter stadiums were an attempt at modern architecture that could accommodate all events (baseball, football, concerts, etc.). These new stadiums are truly "Baseball Stadiums." I am an avid baseball fan (and Mets fan) now living in Chicago. There is an inexplicable sensation you get when walking into Wrigley Field then if you walk into Comisky (aka: the last field build before Camden Yards). It is that feeling these stadiums are trying to replicate.
I would like to see some innovation and a look forward, but I don't want to loose that feeling I get when I am at the old Yankee Stadium eating a hot dog.
04.01.08
09:26
Does the architects use of style, proportion and material not qualify as an adaptation of an established vernacular? Is it wrong to seek a connection with a very real and well documented past rather than a conjectured future? I agree that we should always seek to do things better, but, architecturally at least, maybe we should appreciate when a group works to finesse an architype rather than reinvent it.
04.01.08
09:32
Here in the Bronx, we would like to see the Yankees and the Mets push for a NEW tradition - LEED® Certification. HOK Sport did it with Nationals Park; they can do it here in New York City.
The Nationals Park is now the nation's greenest ballpark.It received LEED® Silver Certification from the U.S. Green Building Council, making it the first major stadium in the United States to achieve LEED Certification.
04.01.08
09:47
04.01.08
10:49
04.02.08
01:41
04.02.08
02:31
As for the suggestion, which seems widely accepted here, that baseball fans "demand" traditional design, this is demonstrably false. Baseball fans demand only one thing: a good ballgame, and they will watch one in any building in which they can find one, regardless of its style. When the very modern Rogers Center (nee SkyDome) opened in Toronto just 3 years prior to Camden Yards, it set attendance records. With a championship club on the field, it was the first stadium to draw more than 4 million a year. Conversely, while Oriole Park is, as Ellen notes, a "public amenity," in recent years, with the Birds' performance a public nuissance, attendance has been lousy.
04.02.08
09:10
04.02.08
09:31
I see imaginary cornfields and ghosts walking out of the field.
That's not entirely true. I see home as a cardboard box. First at the curb, Second as the sewer, and third as the tree. They will always be so in my mind. And a whole team comprised of three little boys. Sometimes a mom who threw like a girl and a dad who had a swing like a scythe cutting grass.
04.02.08
10:33
04.02.08
10:48
Since fans vote with their wallets, I'd argue that while retro stadiums may not fit into your or my design sensibilities or idea of contribution, they've been wildly successful. MLB profits are probably double what they were in the 80's.
Fred Wilpon is sinking over $600 million in a stadium, and I'd forgive him if he's not necessarily interested in making significant contributions to the world of architecture, and wants to protect his investment with what has worked time and time again the past 20 years.
Fans LIKE retro ballparks. Isn't that the ultimate truth?
04.02.08
04:59
04.02.08
05:37
Perhaps the wave of nostalgia is help people forget or ignore the mess that is modern baseball.
04.02.08
09:18
04.02.08
11:07
Nothing better than watching a ball game than watching construction, right? But then again, I like to watch golf. And paint drying. Ha!
VR/
04.02.08
11:53
There was something about the "thoughtless" architecture of turn-of-the-century stadiums that were so terrible they were successful. I say this because I too grew up in the Cleveland metro area and went to the games as a kid. I also lived in Boston and New York for a few years and have gone to Yankees and Sox games there.
All ball parks were successfull for the same reason. The reason is this, they were so quickly and "poorly" designed that you had an inhunman experience in them. Almost cattle like. I remember entering the Cleveland Municipal Stadium - named after the city, not a donor or some corporation - and seeing the monster that the stdium is: a huge mass of concrete and windows. I was impressed by it's carelessness.. like walking into an old warehouse... that was baseball. Once in you were packed in a croud marching up chain covered ramps that led to hallways.. always alert always alert. Then a narrow set of stairs, poorly signed, led you to the field. Affrad of falling you marched up, pressed inthe croud, more alert than ever. At the top of the stair is the most amazing thing you've ever seen - the buggest fuucking green field inside the biggest fucking cement shell and people are screaming... you are in a man factory. It smells like meat, sweat, dirt, skin, beer and is filled with cursing, spitting, yelling, and praying. That's baseball.
Now parks have been designed... bny designers. They smell nice, look nice, taste nice, and the people are nice. Clevelenad;'s relatively new Jacab's Field is glass, brick and steel. No concrete. That's not baseball. You can't replace it like TGI Friday's but it would be great to maintain the parks that still exist.
Basebal; isn't supposed to be comfortable. If it was you would fall asleep.
04.03.08
12:24
video. That other one stinks.
VR/
04.03.08
01:24
I was impressed with Camden Yards at its opening--admittedly, as a 12-year-old with a baseball aficionado father, I didn't understand its deeper implications--and I continue to think it's quite a handsome structure that plays well with its surroundings. Many of the newest retro-styled ballparks go a few steps further and step into the realm of the pseudo-nostalgic cliches that have become popular in both new urbanist developments and, strangely enough, in suburban sprawlitecture. I see it so often in "lifestyle" shopping centers--phony downtowns filled with national retail chains, "Towne Centers" and "Commons," cute-as-a-button fountains, benches, and lampposts, and so forth. It's a revisionist, heartwarming, wholesome, and totally inaccurate version of what the past was like.
As I said, I would rather see organic materials and human-scaled architecture. I think it's a shame that our conception of "modern" must always look like something out of Tomorrowland. But I'd rather be honest and not try to pretend that "retro" architecture is an accurate depiction of things as they once were.
04.03.08
11:03
04.03.08
12:57
1. Built in 1966, the building most certainly possessed a sense of place and specificity, more so than the new stadium.
The roof's 96-arches (called "The Crown of Arches") echoed Eero Saarinen's iconic Gateway Arch, completed the year prior.
This stadium represented exactly the kind of period inspired architecture many of you are calling for in Flushing Park.
2 The stadium was not purpose specific. It has been home to professional football games, wrestling tournaments, circuses and rock concerts.
The ultimate demise of Busch Memorial Stadium was a classic "keeping up with the Jones" and how can we make more money on amenities, which is what is wrong with America.
04.03.08
10:34
Unfortunately the question seems to be asked for the wrong reason. Instead of understanding the situation, the writer is saying 'Everyone has that. I want to be different.' If everyone has seat belts, should we look into something else?
Nonetheless, it's a really interesting question. Here are five of many probable reasons:
1. Baseball stadiums are now often built by taxpayers and a traditional stadium, being trendy, is an easy sell.
2. The era of architecture the stadiums are inspired is thought of as the Golden Age of Baseball (the height of the sport).
3. Homeruns and wacky plays entertain the average person, and the strange dimensions of these kinds of stadiums allow for more of both.
4. Baseball, like all forms of leisure, is an escape. So the more different a stadium is from your office building, the better.
5. Baseball is America's pastime and that era of architecture is remembered as patriotic.
04.04.08
06:21
Nobody ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American public.
H. L. Mencken
I agree, MLB is raking in cash hand over fist, partly due to the retro ballparks popping up everywhere mostly on the taxpayer dime. Wilpon and Steinbrenner aside, it's easy to make gobs of cash when you hold local communities hostage and pay almost nothing for your vintage ballpark, and control most of the revenues, i.e. parking, concessions, seat licenses, advertising revenue. I would argue that most of the revenue boom is due to looking the other way while steroid enhanced shortstops belt out home runs in 13-9 "pitchers duels". I also agree that baseball owners and local governments can build whatever the hell they want, if people like the faux-friendly confines so be it.
Hell, if designers got what they wanted we would never see doofus Bud Light commercials, or Ford F-150s, or Wal-Marts, or American Idol, OR having a beer with George Bush, all of which the public adores.
More Mencken.
baseball stimulates "a childish and orgiastic local pride, a typical American weakness...
Thanks.
04.05.08
05:14
04.06.08
09:18
(Nothing more comforting to an American than baseball? That's almost offensive.)
To the point, however: we're really good at regurgitating stuff. Look at Hollywood for crying out loud. Having lived in Hollywood for much of my life, I know that there is certainly no dearth of good, original screenplays out there, and yet Hollywood continues to remake older films. Another Casablanca, starring Madonna? Fer rillz?
But that's economics. If it was a success the first time, we can still bank on it now, right? High return, little risk.
Can the same be said for baseball stadiums? I don't know; I'm a web designer, not an architect. But I don't discount the role the dollar has to play in all this.
04.07.08
05:21
As said before, the traditional stadium is safe, and baseball being seeped in tradition will probably take babysteps towards progress.
04.08.08
02:10
I have a (bad) feeling that the newest trend in major league ballparks is to treat them like shopping malls, amusement parks, or (new) Vegas-style attractions in the interests of creating a "family-friendly" environment that can compete with the lure of cheap seats and entertainment offered at minor league parks. This sentiment comes after having just visited Comerica Park in Detroit with its food court, merry-go-round, ferris wheel, and tiger sculptures galore.
Personally, I think this takes the excitement out of visiting a park. The last thing I want is to feel like I'm wandering around in one of those suburban outdoor shopping malls. I think a return to a seedier atmosphere is long overdue.
Once they bring back heart-attack inducing food, cheap beer, and, most importantly, trough urinals, you can count me in.
04.10.08
02:35
VR/
04.14.08
01:32
04.14.08
05:59
I suspect you're trolling here, but I'll bite a little bit.
Why are you assuming that the architecture of the 21st Century should be the same as the architecture called for by 19th century architects like Frank Lloyd Wright and Mies Van Der Rohe?
They wanted a Zeitgeist architecture, an architecture of time, which they tied to the expression of technology. The architecture needed today, I believe is the architecture of community and place. And sustainability.
There was a time when Modernism accurately expressed our culture, but that time is past. It is now nothing more than an expression of style, and that expression is increasingly ego-centric, anti-urban and unsustainable.
We need buidings that add up to the creation of good places. Extensive studies by Chris Alexander, Space Syntax and many others increasingly show that the qualities that do that are timeless and universal.
My standard for judging CitiField is not whether or not it's nostalgic, but whether or not it's a good place. That's determined by many qualities including the spatial experience, the proportions of the facades, the quality of the materials, etc.
Fenway is the best park because it's the best spatial experience, not because it's the oldest park. It has a sense of enclosure that the modem columnless stadiums will never have. Google "Phil Bess" and "Save Fenway Park" to read more about that.
Wilpon told the architects of CitiField to make it like Ebbets Feild, where the Dodgers played. But then he put the field in the middle of a parking lot. As a Brooklyn boy, he should have known better.
Ebbets Field was firmly embedded in the urban fabric of Brooklyn. The team got its name because their fans had to "dodge" streetcars to get to the field. But CitiField has no city, and the Metropolitans have no metropolis. They should play on the Atlantic Yards site, where there are 5 or 6 subway lines and the LIRR. Their urban locations are part of what make Fenway and Wrigley the two best fields.
Someone mentioned that the old Busch stadium sat well in downtown St. Louis. That's right. And of all the concrete "donut" stadiums built in the 1960s, it's the one that had the spatial intimacy and sensitive renovations to make it a great place to watch a game.
As I said, I'm talking about an architecture of place, not an architecture of time.
04.18.08
04:51
In the same way, as much as I hesitate to even meekly question the relevance of a much-deserved tribute to Jackie Robinson, I wonder where Marvelous Marv Throneberry, who actually played for the Mets, and unlike Robinson is a legitimate (if dubious) part of its heritage, might seek his monument.
04.18.08
05:19
It's not baseball, but the new Dallas Cowboys stadium will be a modern gem.
04.23.08
01:32
04.24.08
10:17
--simon
04.24.08
04:35
Perhaps baseball is turning into one of something like a cultural relic (theater in Japan or clogging in Holland) that you see at a fair where the costumes and structure are stuck to rigidly.
07.30.08
10:10