Richard White
Senior Member
That sort of thing would be better suited to Tim Hortons field in Hamilton.
What would?
That sort of thing would be better suited to Tim Hortons field in Hamilton.
Monster trucks?
Here’s an example of a 12,500-seat MLB stadium used for exactly one game:
Fort Bragg Field – BaseballParks.com
baseballparks.com
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If you scaled it up to 25k seats and attached it to BMO field for the concourses it could work for a few seasons. Add a permanent building for team facilities that can be repurposed after the field gets torn down.
Something like this for the Jays would be a good solution if they build a new stadium on the Skydome site. There's simply no better site than the current one.This was also built for 2 years at Hastings Park in Vancouver that was used by the Whitecaps and BC Lions when BC Place was getting its makeover / new roof.
Seats 28,000 and cost $15m
Minneapolis is like a slightly warmer Winnipeg. It has a more extreme climate than Toronto, colder in the winter and warmer in the summer. If they can have an open air MLB stadium, so can Toronto. Although I'd be shocked if we end up with anything other than a retractable roof.Minneapolis’ weather is not much different than ours and they have a great open-air stadium.
There's a profile/interview piece on Bob McCown in the Globe where he talks about a plan he pitched to the federal government over a decade ago for a 'stadium district' at Downsview.
I'm not a fan of his or the idea but it's interesting to read about nonetheless.
"Backed by a friend, a former pro sports owner with access to tens of billions of dollars of capital, he pitched the federal government on a development that would use the entire Downsview Airport site in the north end of Toronto for a new stadium district. It would include a baseball stadium, an arena for a second Toronto NHL team, a football stadium for an expansion NFL team, a high-performance sports school, a large central park, retail, and housing for 60,000 residents. Oh, and a monorail to service the entire, carless property. And a moat – for sailing in the summer and skating in the winter, with Tim Hortons placed every mile or so, for hot chocolate pitstops. They drafted Moshe Safdie, the iconic Montreal architect perhaps best known for Expo 67′s Habitat apartment project; so what if he’d never designed a stadium before?"
Here's a link to the full, paywalled, article. Warning, it contains Bob McCown.
Bob McCown determined to move on from Rogers and put Toronto ‘on the map’
Podcasts, wineries, documentaries and more – Bob McCown has big planswww.theglobeandmail.com