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Citizens Bank Park

Citizens Bank Park
The Bank
Citizens Bank Park.svg
Fieldatthepark.jpg
Address One Citizens Bank Way
Location Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Coordinates 39°54′21″N 75°9′59″W / 39.90583°N 75.16639°W / 39.90583; -75.16639Coordinates: 39°54′21″N 75°9′59″W / 39.90583°N 75.16639°W / 39.90583; -75.16639
Public transit AT&T Station:
Owner City of Philadelphia
Operator Global Spectrum
Capacity 43,651 (2011–present)
43,647 (2007–10)
43,308 (2006)
43,500 (2004–05)
Record attendance 46,967 (January 2, 2012) 2012 NHL Winter Classic
Baseball: 46,528 (October 8, 2009)
Field size Left field foul pole
329 feet (100 m)
Left field power alley
374 feet (114 m)
The "Angle" (left of CF to LCF)
409 feet (125 m) – 381 feet (116 m) – 387 feet (118 m)
Center field, straightaway
401 feet (122 m)
Right field power alley
369 feet (112 m)
Right field foul pole
330 feet (101 m)
Surface
Riviera Bermuda Grass (2012–16)
Kentucky Bluegrass (2004–12, 2016–present)
Scoreboard Left Field HD display Board, 76 feet 0 inches (23.16 m) x 97 feet 0 inches (29.57 m), 7,372 square feet (680 m2)
Daktronics left field scoreboard message board, baseline message boards, HD displays and out-of-town scoreboards
Construction
Broke ground June 28, 2002
Opened April 3, 2004
Construction cost US$458 million
($581 million in 2017 dollars)
Architect EwingCole (formerly Ewing Cole Cherry Brott, Philadelphia)
Populous
Agoos Lovera Architects (Philadelphia)
Project manager Stranix Associates
General contractor L. F. Driscoll/Hunt
Main contractors Synterra, Ltd.
Don Todd Associates, Inc.
Tenants
Philadelphia Phillies (MLB) (2004–present)

Citizens Bank Park is a baseball park located in Philadelphia, within the South Philadelphia Sports Complex. It is the home of the Philadelphia Phillies, the city's Major League Baseball (MLB) franchise. It is commonly referred to by locals simply as "The Bank" or "CBP". Citizens Bank Park opened on April 3, 2004, and hosted its first regular season baseball game on April 12 of the same year, with the Phillies losing to the Cincinnati Reds, 4–1.

The ballpark was built to replace the now-demolished Veterans Stadium (a football/baseball multipurpose facility), and features natural grass and dirt playing field and also features a number of Philadelphia-style food stands, including several which serve cheesesteaks, hoagies, and other regional specialties. The ballpark lies on the northeast corner of the Sports Complex, which includes Lincoln Financial Field, Wells Fargo Center, and Xfinity Live!. The stadium's capacity is 43,651 seats.

In 1999, the Phillies and the Philadelphia Eagles of the National Football League joined their Western Pennsylvania counterparts, the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Pittsburgh Steelers, in making requests to replace both Veterans Stadium and Three Rivers Stadium in Pittsburgh with separate stadiums. Pressure for new Philadelphia stadiums increased after a railing collapsed at The Vet during the 1998 Army–Navy Game, injuring eight cadets. The Pirates threatened to leave Pittsburgh in 1997, which helped convince the legislature to approve funding for the four proposed stadiums. While Allegheny County and the City of Pittsburgh approved the pacts swiftly, due to plans already being in place at the time of legislative approval, debate within Philadelphia's city leadership carried on as Pittsburgh opened their stadiums (PNC Park for the Pirates and Heinz Field for the Steelers) in 2001. The Eagles agreed to a site slightly southeast of Veterans Stadium, which would become Lincoln Financial Field. The Eagles' stadium was built on the site of an old food warehouse and celebrated its grand opening in August 2003.


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