The tendency of baseball park construction in the 1990s The current trend of baseball park construction is a retro design reminiscent of the early era combined with modern technology. The tendency of Frank · Defaard's "architectural era" known as "sports illustration" is remarkable in three new American League Park, Camden Stadium, Golden Jubilee Park, Jacob Stadium, Azerbaijan. Inlington of the baseball stadium. The current idea of building a stadium is to place a retro-style park in the center of the city. The whole movement was built by Camden Yard's Oriole Park, a new design concept.
However, since the requirements of baseball and football are very different, it tends to build a single-purpose stadium that began in Kansas City from 1972 to 1973 and accelerated in the 1990s. In some cases, the American football field was built near the baseball field to share mutual parking lots and other facilities. Along with the spread of MLS, since the late 1990s, the construction of a stadium dedicated to football has increased to meet the needs of sports. In many cases, the initial baseball stadium was made to match a specific land or block. This led to the asymmetric size of many baseball stadiums. For example, the Yankee Stadium was built in a triangular block in the Bronx in New York. This will increase the field size on the left, but the field size on the right will be smaller.
In the past several decades, stadium development has been conducted in the United States in parallel. The Baker Bowl of Philadelphia's baseball field was opened in 1887 in its original form, but it was fully rebuilt in 1895 and a new world for the construction of the stadium was opened in two major areas. The second incarnation of the stadium was the world's first cantilever second floor (story) at the stadium, the first baseball stadium to use steel and bricks in most of its buildings. Another influential venue is the Harvard Stadium in Boston, built by Harvard University in 1903 for the American football team and athletics events. This is the world's first stadium that uses concrete and steel structure. In 1909, due to the opening of Philadelphia Heber Park and the opening of the Pittsburgh Forbes stadium several months later, concrete and steel structures entered the baseball field. The latter is the world's first three-story sports facility