Location | 601 Morris Street Charleston, WV 25301 |
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Coordinates | 38°20′56.5″N 81°37′30.4″W / 38.349028°N 81.625111°WCoordinates: 38°20′56.5″N 81°37′30.4″W / 38.349028°N 81.625111°W |
Owner | City of Charleston |
Operator | Palisades Baseball |
Capacity | 4,500 |
Field size |
Left Field: 330 ft (101 m) Center Field: 400 ft (122 m) Right Field: 320 ft (98 m) |
Surface | Grass |
Construction | |
Broke ground | March 18, 2004 |
Opened | April 14, 2005 |
Construction cost |
$25 million ($28.2 million in 2016 dollars) |
Architect | HNTB |
Services engineer | Henderson Engineers, Inc. |
General contractor | BBL Carlton, LLC |
Tenants | |
West Virginia Power (SAL) (2005–present) Charleston Golden Eagles (NCAA) (2005–present) Marshall Thundering Herd (NCAA) (2006–present) West Virginia Mountaineers (NCAA) (2013) |
Appalachian Power Park is the current home field for the West Virginia Power, a minor league baseball team in the South Atlantic League. The Power are a Class-A affiliate of the Pittsburgh Pirates. It also serves the baseball programs of Marshall University, and the University of Charleston. The stadium, which opened in April 2005, is located in the East End of Charleston, West Virginia. It seats 4,500 fans and cost $25 million to build. The dimensions of the field are as follows: left field - 330 feet, center field - 400 feet, right field - 320 feet.
Additionally, the park hosts the West Virginia state high school baseball championships. Since 2006, it has been the home field for Marshall conference games, because the school does not have an adequate baseball facility on its campus located 50 miles (80 km) away in Huntington, West Virginia. It plays its non-conference games at the Kennedy Center Field near campus and at Linda K. Epling Stadium in Beckley, West Virginia. When West Virginia University moved from the Big East Conference to the Big 12 Conference its on campus baseball field likewise did not meet league standards, and WVU played its conference games there until a new taxpayer funded stadium was built on campus.
The stadium has also hosted concerts, boxing matches, charity events and shown television coverage of college football games on its scoreboard.
The naming rights were purchased by Appalachian Power, the West Virginia and southwest Virginia operating unit of American Electric Power.