Fielders Stadium

Fielders Stadium
Location Route 173 & Green Bay Road
Zion, IL 60099
Coordinates 42°27′57″N 87°52′47″W / 42.46587°N 87.87961°W / 42.46587; -87.87961Coordinates: 42°27′57″N 87°52′47″W / 42.46587°N 87.87961°W / 42.46587; -87.87961
Owner Kevin Costner
Capacity 7,000 for baseball and 12,500 for concerts
Surface Natural grass & plush felt
Construction
Broke ground November 6, 2009
Built June 29, 2010
Opened July 2, 2010
Architect Panattoni Development Company
Tenants
Lake County Fielders (2010–2011)

Fielders Stadium is an unfinished baseball park in Zion, Illinois, nicknamed "A Diamond on the Border" and "Lake County's Field of Dreams," and was home to the Lake County Fielders of the North American League. The ballpark was to be located on the corner of 9th Street and Green Bay Road in the Trumpet Park business park in Zion. The Fielders baseball team folded in August 2011 and the stadium was never completed.[1][2]

Funding problems

Before the property for the stadium had been secured, an official groundbreaking ceremony was held on November 5, 2009, at a warehouse adjacent to the ballpark's future site. In February 2010, with construction yet to begin on the land that had yet to be purchased, the Fielders announced that they would downsize their plans for the stadium in order to complete the park in time for its June 11 opening day. Eventually, when the city of Zion proved unable to secure funding for the purchase of the property, the city announced in April 2010 that the stadium site was moved several blocks south to a new location at the corner of Illinois State 173 and Green Bay Road. For the 2010 season, Zion and the Fielders hope to build a temporary facility that will resemble a "county fair" setting while construction continues during the season. Temporary bleachers and party decks will be erected around the field.

Details

The state of the art ballpark was to have a capacity of 7,000 spectators,[3] and promised box seats, pub style seats, and general lawn seating. The stadium was also expected to feature five luxury suites and a year-round restaurant and banquet hall. The park also planned to feature a Kids Zone, party decks, and a concert stage. It remains to be seen to what extent these features will appear in the new park.

The new ballpark calls for many of the same features, as well as a movie theater, Daniel Murphy statue and "ballpark village" setting around the stadium.

2010 season

The Fielders opened the 2010 season at Carthage College across the border in Kenosha, Wisconsin, because of Zion Ballpark's finance problems. The Fielders would eventually move back to Zion on July 2, playing at a field that was not much more than a field and bleachers. On Monday, July 26, the Fielders played their first night game in Zion, as lights had been installed.

References

  1. Moran, Dan (May 12, 2015). "Game over: Zion, Lake County Fielders drop lawsuits with $55K settlement". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved April 21, 2016.
  2. Johnson, Dick (October 24, 2013). "Abandoned Stadium Project Costs Taxpayers Millions". 5NBC Chicago. Retrieved April 21, 2016.
  3. Rotenberk, Lori (April 4, 2009). "Major League Hopes Pinned on the Minors". New York Times. Retrieved 2009-04-08.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, April 21, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.