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Lackawanna County Stadium Authority

PNC Field
PNC Field.PNG
Former names Lackawanna County Stadium (1989–2006)
Address 235 Montage Mountain Road
Location Moosic, Pennsylvania
Coordinates 41°21′37.46″N 75°41′2.28″W / 41.3604056°N 75.6839667°W / 41.3604056; -75.6839667Coordinates: 41°21′37.46″N 75°41′2.28″W / 41.3604056°N 75.6839667°W / 41.3604056; -75.6839667
Owner Lackawanna County Stadium Authority
Operator Mandalay Baseball Properties
Capacity 10,000 (2013–present)
10,310 (2007–2011)
10,982 (1989–2006)
Record attendance 11,515
Field size Left Field Line - 326 ft
Right Field Line – 330 ft
Left Center Field/Right Center Field – 371 ft
Center Field – 408 ft
Surface Artificial turf (1989–2006)
Grass (2007–present)
Construction
Broke ground August 28, 1986
Opened April 26, 1989
Renovated 2012
Reopened April 4, 2013
Construction cost US$25 million
($49.4 million in 2017 dollars)
US$43.3 million(Renovation)
Architect GSGSB Inc.
EwingCole(Renovation)
Structural engineer Greenman-Pedersen, Inc.
General contractor Melon Stuart Construction
Alvin H. Butz, Inc.(Renovation)
Tenants
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders (IL) (1989–2011, 2013–present)

PNC Field, formerly Lackawanna County Stadium (1989–2006), is a 10,000-seat minor league baseball stadium located in Moosic, Pennsylvania that serves the Scranton-Wilkes-Barre Metropolitan Area. It is the home of the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders, the Triple-A affiliate of the New York Yankees. It also hosts the PIAA District II baseball district championship games. The stadium also hosts high school football games as well for the battle of the Railriders Bowl for teams in the Scranton area. Lackawanna County sold the naming rights to PNC Bank on February 1, 2007, and the stadium became known as PNC Field.

The stadium opened on April 26, 1989. The artificial turf surfaced stadium was used as a multipurpose facility. The upper level seats of the stadium were orange and the lower level seats were green. They also have bleacher seats at the stadium. Many amateur sports competitions were held there, as well as regional band competitions, ice skating, and car shows.

On July 12, 1995, Lackawanna County Stadium hosted the Triple-A All-Star Game. The American League affiliate stars shutout their National League opponents, 9–0, in front of 10,965 fans. Future major leaguers to appear in the game included Derek Jeter, Jeromy Burnitz, Jason Isringhausen, and manager Grady Little.

In 2007, the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre franchise signed a Player Development Contract with the New York Yankees, ending an 18-year agreement with the Philadelphia Phillies. This new contract called for the conversion of the playing surface to natural grass. The stadium still plays host to several amateur baseball competitions throughout the season.


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