Stadia Magazine
  • News
    • A-E
      • Architecture & Design
      • Audio Systems
      • Branding, Broadcasting & Naming Rights
      • Broadcasting Infrastructure
      • Catering & Concessions
      • Communications Infrastructure
      • Engineering & Construction
    • F-N
      • Field Lighting
      • Floorings & Protective Coatings
      • IT Systems Integration
      • Naming Rights
      • Natural Turf
      • New Project
    • O-R
      • Off-Pitch Lighting
      • Renovation & Refurbishment
      • Retail & Entertainment Design
      • Roofing Materials & Technologies
    • S-Z
      • Screens & Visual Displays
      • Seating, Luxury Suites & Premium Seats
      • Security, Ticketing & Access Control
      • Sports Surfaces
      • Stadium Sustainability
      • Synthetic Turf
      • Tournament Venue
  • Features
  • Online Magazines
    • March 2025
    • October 2023
    • March 2023
    • October 2022
    • Archive Issues
    • Subscribe Free!
  • Opinion
  • Videos
  • Podcast
  • Webinars
  • Supplier Spotlight
  • Jobs
    • Browse Industry Jobs
    • Post a Job – It’s FREE!
    • Manage Jobs (Employers)
LinkedIn YouTube X (Twitter)
LinkedIn
Subscribe to Magazine Subscribe to Email Newsletter Media Pack
Stadia Magazine
  • News
      • Architecture & Design
      • Audio Systems
      • Branding, Broadcasting & Naming Rights
      • Broadcasting Infrastructure
      • Catering & Concessions
      • Communications Infrastructure
      • Engineering & Construction
      • Field Lighting
      • Floorings & Protective Coatings
      • IT Systems Integration
      • Naming Rights
      • Natural Turf
      • New Project
      • Off-Pitch Lighting
      • Renovation & Refurbishment
      • Retail & Entertainment Design
      • Roofing Materials & Technologies
      • Screens & Visual Displays
      • Seating, Luxury Suites & Premium Seats
      • Security, Ticketing & Access Control
      • Sports Surfaces
      • Stadium Sustainability
      • Synthetic Turf
      • Tournament Venue
  • Features
  • Online Magazines
    1. March 2025
    2. October 2023
    3. March 2023
    4. October 2022
    5. Archive Issues
    6. Subscribe Free!
    Featured
    31st March 2025

    March 2025 issue is out NOW!

    Online Magazines By Saul Wordsworth
    Recent

    March 2025 issue is out NOW!

    31st March 2025

    October 2024 issue is out NOW!

    28th October 2024

    In this Issue – March 2024

    9th April 2024
  • Opinion
  • Videos
  • Podcast
  • Webinars
  • Supplier Spotlight
  • Jobs
    • Browse Industry Jobs
    • Post a Job – It’s FREE!
    • Manage Jobs (Employers)
LinkedIn YouTube
Stadia Magazine
Architecture & Design

FIRST LOOK: Tampa Bay Rays’ new St. Petersburg ballpark

Lauren DysonBy Lauren Dyson31st May 20245 Mins Read
Share LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email

The Tampa Bay Rays MLB team has released detailed renderings and shared specific details about its proposed new stadium, which team president Matt Silverman has said will be “the most intimate ballpark in baseball”.

Last September, the Rays reached an agreement with the city of St. Petersburg and Pinellas County to build a new US$1.3 billion ballpark on the Tropicana Field site as part of the long-term redevelopment of the Historic Gas Plant District. The St. Petersburg City Council and Pinellas County Commissioners are expected to vote on the ballpark and development agreements in July. If approved, the Rays plan to begin construction in January 2025 to have it ready for Opening Day 2028.

The ballpark will include 30,000 fixed seats, with the capacity for Rays games reaching 33,000-34,000 when accounting for standing room and other gathering spaces. Tropicana Field’s current capacity with the upper deck closed is 25,025, but otherwise, the lowest capacity for a big league ballpark is 34,830 at Progressive Field in Cleveland.

Of the 30,000 seats in the three-tier ballpark – main concourse, club level and upper deck – approximately 70% would be below the top level, with roughly 15,000 in the lower bowl.

The new stadium would have fewer suites than the team’s current home ballpark but would offer what the club called “a variety of comfortable seating types, from premium clubs and suites to flexible viewing areas, decks and social gathering spaces.”

The field will have artificial turf. Some aspects of the design have not yet been finalised, including the height and shape of the outfield fences, but the plan is to have both bullpens beyond the outfield wall and video boards in the outfield corners, with both teams’ clubhouse and workout spaces underneath the stands with easy access to the field.

Silverman has also said the Rays’ new ballpark will have the smallest foul territory in baseball, along with the shortest distance from home plate to the backstop. That part of the design should bring everyone, including fans in the upper-deck seats (which would be around the infield, split into two sections) closer to the field.

“The coolest part is how close the fans will be to the field and how close a connection they’ll feel to the game that’s being played on the field,” Silverman said. “In the past, ballparks were designed before [protective] nets were required, so there was a distance that you needed from the field for safety. And when you have a larger capacity, it makes it much more difficult to put the seats close to the field because the geometry doesn’t work. Knowing where we are today, we’re able to minimise foul territory and bring all of the seats much closer to the field of play, creating an energy and intimacy that doesn’t exist in baseball. This will be, we think, the most intimate ballpark in baseball.”

Additionally, the field will be visible from all concourses, with full 360-degree circulation around the ballpark. The Rays haven’t finalised many details, but Silverman said there will be “water features,” including either the popular Rays Touch Tank or “a successor to the ray tank.”

The tiered, pavilion-style roof also plays into the feeling of intimacy. Whereas Tropicana Field’s dome looms high over everyone in the ballpark, the new stadium will have a high roof over the field and a lower roof over the seats. The Rays have used Statcast data to ensure the roof would be high enough to not impact fly balls, as the catwalks at The Trop occasionally do.

The goal is for the new ballpark to seamlessly flow in and out of the rest of the mixed-use district, which will eventually include restaurants, bars, entertainment venues, housing and a hotel, plus office and retail space, as well as the surrounding areas of downtown St. Petersburg.

According to Populous design principal Byron Chambers, part of the aim is making it feel like “the inside’s outside and the outside’s inside,” even in a fixed-roof stadium.

The team believes that can be achieved in several ways. For one, large windows that wrap around the ballpark would let in sunlight and let fans see outside. Some of the street-level panels will be operable, allowing them to remain open during cooler months.

To that end, the new ballpark will be a ‘365-day venue’ and parts of the stadium, such as the team store and restaurants/bars will be open year-round, not just during baseball season. The team intends to host a variety of other events for audiences ranging up to 50,000 people, including concerts, festivals, conferences, graduations and other sporting events throughout the year.

“For me, it’s the outfield experience … and how all that is really close and really unique and is able to be active on gamedays and non-gamedays,” said Zach Allee, Populous lead designer. “I think it has the ability to really feel like St. Pete and Tampa Bay and become part of the everyday community.”

Share. Twitter LinkedIn Facebook Email
Previous ArticleConstruction begins on Zimbabwe’s new multimillion dollar stadium
Next Article VIDEO: Renovation plans revealed for Bank of America Stadium
Lauren Dyson

Related Posts

New Project

Malaysia offers first glimpse of Shah Alam Sports Complex

12th June 20253 Mins Read
New Project

Oakland Athletic sets date for breaking ground on new $1.75b Vegas stadium

12th June 20252 Mins Read
Synthetic Turf

Global artificial turf market projected to reach $7b by 2034

5th June 20252 Mins Read
Latest Posts

Malaysia offers first glimpse of Shah Alam Sports Complex

12th June 2025

NBA’s Miami Heat chooses L-Acoustics to enhance game-day experience

12th June 2025

Oakland Athletic sets date for breaking ground on new $1.75b Vegas stadium

12th June 2025
Supplier Spotlights
Our Social Channels
  • LinkedIn
Getting in Touch
  • Weekly News Emails
  • Meet the Editors
  • Contact Us
  • Media Pack
Related Topics
  • Auditoria
FREE WEEKLY NEWS EMAIL!

Get the 'best of the week' from this website direct to your inbox every Tuesday


© 2023 Mark Allen Group Ltd | All Rights Reserved
  • Cookie Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.