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Citi Field

Citi Field
"The New Shea"
Citi Field.svg
Le Citi Field.jpg
Location Queens, New York
Coordinates 40°45′25″N 73°50′45″W / 40.75694°N 73.84583°W / 40.75694; -73.84583Coordinates: 40°45′25″N 73°50′45″W / 40.75694°N 73.84583°W / 40.75694; -73.84583
Public transit Long Island Rail Road (LIRR): Port Washington Line at Mets – Willets Point
New York City Subway: NYCS-bull-trans-7.svg NYCS-bull-trans-7d.svg trains at Mets – Willets Point
New York City Bus: Q48
Owner City of New York
Operator New York Mets
Capacity 41,922 (2012–present)
41,800 (2009–2011)
45,000+ (including standing room)
Record attendance 45,186 (2013 All-Star Game)
44,859 (2015 World Series)
44,466 (Regular season)
Field size
Surface Kentucky Bluegrass
Construction
Broke ground November 13, 2006
Opened March 29, 2009 (college game)
April 3, 2009 (exhibition game)
April 13, 2009 (regular season)
Construction cost US$900 million
($1 billion in 2017 dollars)
Architect Populous (formerly HOK Sport)
Structural engineer WSP Cantor Seinuk
Services engineer M-E Engineers, Inc.
General contractor Hunt/Bovis Lend Lease Alliance II (a Joint Venture)
Main contractors International Concrete Products
Tenants
New York Mets (MLB) (2009–present)
Website
http://newyork.mets.mlb.com/nym/ballpark/index.jsp

Left field
Left center
Deep left center
Center field
Deep right center 
Right center
Right field

335 feet (102 m)
358 feet (109 m)
385 feet (117 m)
408 feet (124 m)
398 feet (121 m)
375 feet (114 m)
330 feet (100 m)

Citi Field is a stadium located in Flushing Meadows–Corona Park in the New York City borough of Queens. Completed in 2009, it is the home baseball park of Major League Baseball's New York Mets. Citi Field was built as a replacement for the formerly adjacent Shea Stadium, which opened in 1964 next to the site of the 1964–1965 World's Fair. Citi Field was designed by Populous (then HOK Sport), and is named after Citigroup, a New York financial services company which purchased the naming rights. The $850 million baseball park was funded with $615 million in public subsides, including the sale of New York City municipal bonds which are to be repaid by the Mets plus interest. The payments will offset property taxes for the lifetime of the park. The Mets are receiving $20 million annually from Citibank in exchange for naming the stadium Citi Field. The entire public cost is being borne by city and state taxpayers in New York.

The first game at Citi Field was on March 29, 2009, with a college baseball game between St. John's and Georgetown. The Mets played their first two games at the ballpark on April 3 and April 4, 2009 against the Boston Red Sox as charity exhibition games. The first regular season home game was played on April 13, 2009, against the San Diego Padres. Citi Field hosted the 2013 Major League Baseball All-Star Game. This marked the second time the Mets have hosted the game, the first being 1964, the inaugural season of Shea Stadium.


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Wikipedia

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