Medlar Field at Lubrano Park
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Medlar Field at Lubrano Park | |
---|---|
Location | 701 Porter Road University Park, Pennsylvania 16802 |
Broke ground | May 18, 2005 |
Opened | June 01, 2006 |
Owner | Pennsylvania State University |
Operator | Curve Baseball LP |
Surface | Grass |
Construction cost | $31,400,000 USD |
Architect | L. Robert Kimball and Associates DLR Group |
Tenants | State College Spikes (New York–Penn League) (2006–) Penn State Nittany Lions (Big Ten Conference) (2007–) |
Capacity | 5,406 (Plus 600 standing room only tickets) |
Field dimensions | Left Field - 328ft (99.9m) Left Center Field - 414ft (126.2m) |
Medlar Field at Lubrano Park is a baseball stadium located on the University Park campus of the Pennsylvania State University. The two tenants of this venue are the State College Spikes, a Class A minor league baseball team of the New York–Penn League owned and operated by Curve Baseball LP, owners of the Altoona Curve,[1] and the Penn State Nittany Lions, a NCAA Big Ten Conference baseball team.
This venue opened on June 1, 2006, and the first baseball game of this venue's first baseball season was played on June 20, 2006.[2] The State College Spikes lost their Inaugural Season Opener to the Williamsport Crosscutters by a score of 5–3.[3] The Nittany Lions will began play at this venue in 2007.[2][4]
Seating capacity is 5,406 people, plus 600 standing room only tickets,[5] for a total capacity of approximately 6000 people. Events other than baseball games will be held at this venue,[6] and different seating configurations will be available.
This stadium was designed to feature an unobstructed view of Penn State landmark Mount Nittany over the outfield wall.
Contents |
[edit] History
Penn State alumnus Anthony Lubrano first suggested upgrading Penn State baseball facilities to representatives of the university in 1995.[7] After receiving a donation from Lubrano in 2002, the Penn State Board of Trustees voted to name the new stadium Medlar Field at Lubrano Park. In 2003, representatives of the Altoona Curve management group approached Penn State with the idea of sharing a ballpark that both the Altoona Curve and the Penn State baseball team would use as a home field.[7]
Final plans for the new ballpark were approved by the Penn State Board of Trustees on May 13, 2005.[8] Ground was broken for the new ballpark on May 18, 2005.[6] Among the dignitaries on hand for the groundbreaking ceremony were Pennsylvania governor Ed Rendell, Penn State president Graham Spanier, state Sen. Jake Corman and Penn State Athletic Director Tim Curley.
The ballpark was named a 2006 Project of the Year in the area of sports by Mid-Atlantic Construction. [9][10]
[edit] Naming
Medlar Field at Lubrano Park is named for two Penn State gentlemen, Charles Medlar and Anthony Lubrano. Coach Charles "Chuck" Medlar (1918–1999) was an athletic trainer at Penn State for 35 years,[11] and the head Penn State baseball coach from 1963 to 1981.[12] The Charles Medlar Award is given annually in his honor to the outstanding pitcher of the Penn State baseball team.[12]
Anthony Lubrano is a 1982 alumnus of the Penn State Smeal College of Business, and a former Penn State baseball player who played for Coach Medlar.[7] Since graduation, Lubrano has established a successful financial services company. His donation of $2.5 million dollars (USD) towards this project made him the lead benefactor, and Lubrano received from Penn State the opportunity to name this venue.[7] Lubrano chose to name this venue Medlar Field at Lubrano Park in recognition of Coach Medlar's contributions to Penn State athletics.[7]
[edit] Description
The "footprint" of the stadium (outfield dimensions, foul ground, etc.) is identical to PNC Park in Pittsburgh, PA (home of the Pittsburgh Pirates) except for the right field wall. At PNC, the wall is 21 feet tall, but at Medlar Field, it is 18.55 feet tall to commemorate the year that Penn State was founded. The physical plant of this venue includes the stadium, parking areas, and a pedestrian plaza. The stadium has three levels, Field (clubhouse) Level, Concourse Level, and Luxury Suite Level. The street level entrance to the stadium is on the Concourse Level.
[edit] Field level
There are three clubhouses in this stadium, one for the Nittany Lions, one for the State College Spikes, and one for the visiting team. Home team facilities include a weight room and training area for each team, an indoor batting cage, storage areas, and a laundry room. Entrance into the dugouts and onto the playing field for players is from this level.
[edit] Concourse level
This level includes a first aid station, a baseball–themed store called Off The Rack Outfitters, a customer service center, and restrooms. The State College Spikes offices are also located on this level.
Amenities on the right field side of this level include the Outfield Bleachers seating area, and the Rail Kings seating area located on the Nittany Embroidery Fun Deck.[13] The food concessions in this area include The Right Field Grill, Coaly's Corner, and The Batter's Eye.
Amenities on the left field side of this level include the Left Field Picnic and a play area for children called the S&A Homes Kids Zone. The food concession stands in this area are The Left Field Grill, The "Grand" Stand, and The Bullpen Café.
Food including Philly Cheeseteaks, hot dogs, and ice cream will be sold by the concessions. Beer will sold during Spikes games, but not during Penn State games. Along with the Penn Stater Conference Center and The Nittany Lion Inn, this venue will be one of only three Penn State facilities on the University Park campus where alcohol is allowed to be sold.
Wheelchair–accessible seating is located on the concourse behind the Bullpen Box, Field Box, and Diamond Club seating areas. There is a wheelchair lift located in the left field picnic area, connecting the Concourse Level with the Field Level. An elevator also connects all three levels of the stadium, making all areas accessible.
[edit] Luxury suite level
The 20 luxury suites and the Press Box are located on this level. Eighteen luxury suites are designed to accommodate 12 people each, and two larger suites are designed to accommodate 24 people each.[6] The Press Box consists of three broadcast booths for television and radio media. The Penn State Sports Journalism Center and the Penn State Baseball offices are also located on this level.
[edit] Parking
Two parking lots with a total of 502 parking spaces were built as part of this venue. The Porter North lot has 385 parking spaces and the Porter South Lot has 117.[6] Improvements were also made to Parking Lot 44, which this venue shares with Beaver Stadium and the Bryce Jordan Center.
[edit] Getting there
This venue is accessible by foot, bicycle, public transportation, car, and by air travel. As part of this venue's construction, a landscaped pedestrian plaza called Porter Gardens was built along Porter Road, bicycle racks were installed, and a Centre Area Transportation Authority (CATA) bus stop and drop–off zone was added for the Route H and Route P buses. Nearby highways include Pennsylvania Route 26, U.S. Route 220, U.S. Route 322, and Interstate 80. University Park Airport is located approximately four miles (6.4km) from the ballpark, and provides air travel connections to several cities.
[edit] See also
- Altoona Curve
- Baseball
- Baseball parks
- Minor league
- Pennsylvania State University
- State College Spikes
[edit] References
- ^ Guy Cipriano. Curve Baseball LP a well-organized ownership group. Centre Daily Times. Retrieved on 2006-06-18.
- ^ a b Medlar Field at Lubrano Park Open for Business. GoPSUsports. Retrieved on 2006-06-02.
- ^ Guy Cipriano. Spikes inaugural game spoiled by Crosscutters. Centre Daily Times. Retrieved on 2006-06-21.
- ^ Annemarie Mountz. Penn State baseball team practices in new facility. Penn State Live. Retrieved on 2006-06-02.
- ^ Medlar Field at Lubrano Park Ballpark Fast Facts. State College Spikes. Retrieved on 2006-06-02.
- ^ a b c d Board approves final plans, naming of new ballpark. Penn State Live. Retrieved on 2006-06-19.
- ^ a b c d e Guy Cipriano. Player, coach linked forever by name of new baseball stadium. Centre Daily Times. Retrieved on 2006-06-02.
- ^ Penn State approves new ballpark. Ballpark Digest. Retrieved on 2006-06-03.
- ^ Best of 2006 Award Winners. Mid-Atlantic Construction (Winter 2006). Retrieved on 2007-02-01.
- ^ Medlar Field at Lubrano Park Named 2006 Project of the Year by Mid-Atlantic Construction Magazine. Penn State Intercollegiate Athletics (2007-02-01). Retrieved on 2007-02-01.
- ^ Pennsylvania Athletic Training Hall of Fame. Pennsylvania Athletic Trainers Society, Inc. Retrieved on 2006-06-02.
- ^ a b Nittany Lion Baseball Team Announces Team Awards. GoPSUsports. Retrieved on 2006-06-02.
- ^ State College Spikes. Old State Clothing sponsors Spikes Fun Deck. MiLB.com. Retrieved on 2006-06-04.
[edit] External links
- Penn State Baseball from GoPSUsports
- State College Spikes website
- Medlar Field at Lubrano Park Views - Ball Parks of the Minor Leagues
- Medlar Field at Lubrano Park is at coordinates Coordinates:
- Photographs of Medlar Field at Lubrano Park - Rochester Area Ballparks
Current ballparks in the New York-Penn League | |||||
Pinckney Division | McNamara Division | Stedler Division | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bowman Field • Dwyer Stadium • Eastwood Field Falcon Park • Medlar Field • Russell Diethrick Park |
Dutchess Stadium • KeySpan Park Richmond County Bank Ballpark • Ripken Stadium |
Centennial Field • Damaschke Field Edward A. LeLacheur Park • Joseph L. Bruno Stadium |
|