Location | 2500 Buford Drive Lawrenceville, GA 30043 |
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Coordinates | 34°2′29.38″N 83°59′32.52″W / 34.0414944°N 83.9923667°WCoordinates: 34°2′29.38″N 83°59′32.52″W / 34.0414944°N 83.9923667°W |
Owner | Gwinnett County |
Operator | Gwinnett County |
Capacity | 10,427 |
Field size | LF – 335 feet (102 m) CF – 400 feet (120 m) RF – 335 feet (102 m) |
Surface | Grass |
Construction | |
Broke ground | June 3, 2008 |
Opened | April 17, 2009 |
Construction cost |
$64 million ($71.4 million in 2017 dollars) |
Architect | HKS, Inc. |
Structural engineer | Bliss & Nyitray, Inc |
Services engineer | Smith Seckman Reid, Inc. |
General contractor | Barton Malow Co. |
Tenants | |
Gwinnett Braves (IL) (2009–present) |
Coolray Field (formerly known as Gwinnett Stadium) is a 10,427-seat minor league baseball park in Lawrenceville, Georgia. It is the home field of the Gwinnett Braves, the Triple-A affiliate of the Atlanta Braves.
Coolray Field hosted its first regular season baseball game on April 17, 2009, a 7–4 loss to the Norfolk Tides. The stadium site is located approximately two miles (3 km) east of the Mall of Georgia along Georgia 20, between Interstate 85 and Georgia 316.
The 44-acre (18 ha) site was previously farmland and forest. An additional 73 acres (0.30 km2) of mostly forest around it became a mixed-use project, after a February 2009 rezoning by the Gwinnett County Commission.Naming rights are held by Coolray, an air conditioning and plumbing company based in nearby Marietta.
The stadium construction and maintenance is being paid by the taxpayer-funded Gwinnett County government, but the Braves will keep most of the revenue from ticket and concession stand sales. The municipal bonds used to pay for the stadium run for 30 years (until 2038), but the Braves have an option to back out of the contract after only half of that time (in 2023), if the county does not maintain the facility at an acceptable level. This would leave county taxpayers responsible for the remainder.