Great American Ball Park



         


Great American Ball Park
Description
LocationCincinnati, Ohio
First gameMarch 28, 2003
Capacity42,059
Dimensions
Left328 ft100.0 m
Left-center379 ft115.5 m
Center404 ft123.1 m
Right-center370 ft112.8 m
Right325 ft99.1 m


Great American Ball Park is the home of the Cincinnati Reds, a member of Major League Baseball's National League, and is located in downtown Cincinnati, Ohio on the Ohio River. The fourth home of baseball's oldest professional team, the downtown park opened on March 28, 2003 for an exhibition game with the Cleveland Indians. It hosted its first regular season game on Opening Day, March 31, 2003 as Former U.S. President George H. W. Bush threw the ceremonial first pitch, and the Pittsburgh Pirates beat the Reds, 10-1.

During construction, the new stadium was "wedged" into the space between multi-purpose Cinergy Field (formerly Riverfront Stadium, opened 1970) and the adjacent downtown arena. Cinergy Field was demolished after the 2002 MLB season, and the ballpark is part of an almost entirely revised downtown riverfront, along with Paul Brown Stadium (home of the NFL's Cincinnati Bengals, opened 2000) and the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center (opening 2004).

Although not readily apparent, this facility bears a corporate name. The naming rights were acquired by the Great American Insurance Group.

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Features

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Address

Great American Ball Park
100 Main Street
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
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Statistics

Seat width: 19 inches
Ticket windows: 25
Concourse widths: 40 feet
Escalators: 3
Passenger elevators: 14
Public restrooms: 47 (20 women, 20 men, seven family)
Concession stands: 28
Parking spaces: 850






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