The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

SunTrust borrows features of other popular ballparks,

Braves ballpark unveils a look that borrows popular features of other stadiums.

- By Tim Tucker ttucker@ajc.com

The architectu­ral firm that designed SunTrust Park has created 19 of the 30 MLB stadiums. That prompted this question for Joe Spear, a founder of Kansas City-based Populous: Does the new Braves stadium particular­ly remind you of any of your firm’s other projects?

“No, it doesn’t, really,” Spear said as he looked around SunTrust Park. “Every one of our parks is unique.”

But even if the overall effect is unique, the Braves admit proudly that they borrowed and blended popular features from many stadiums in the design of their new home, which hosted its first game Friday night, an exhibition against the New York Yankees.

“You can see some of the same kind of things here as in other ballparks we have done,” said Spear, Populous’ design principal in charge of the Braves’ project. “But that’s just because that’s what the fans want to buy. They vote with their feet.”

For example, he said, “all of the concourses have a view of the playing field. That’s something you see in some of our other ballparks because the fans love it.”

Baseball is a sport famously prone to comparison­s, and that applies as much to stadiums as to players, teams, eras, you name it.

Braves manager Brian Snitker said SunTrust Park reminds him a bit of the Min-

nesota Twins’ acclaimed Target Field, in part because of the “cozy feel.”

Braves broadcaste­r Chip Caray said pieces of the stadium are reminiscen­t to him of various MLB stadiums.

“The evergreen trees beyond center field, that screams Colorado,” Caray said. “The water feature is going to scream Kansas City. The brick work is like (Chicago’s) Wrigley Field.

“The green seats are a lot like Minnesota. The footprint of the ballpark and the size of it is a lot like Minnesota. The neighborho­od (being built) around it is a lot like Wrigley Field and ultimately what St. Louis will be like.”

Others pointed out similariti­es with various features of MLB stadiums in Philadelph­ia, San Francisco and San Diego.

Braves officials toured many stadiums early in the design process, identifyin­g elements they wanted to adapt and incorporat­e along with their own new ideas.

“There are so many pieces of this stadium which are taken directly out of other stadiums’ success factors,” Braves Chairman and CEO Terry McGuirk said.

Spear thinks the signature defining feature of the Braves’ Cobb County stadium will prove to be its interactio­n with the adjacent 1.5-million-square-foot mixed-use developmen­t, The Battery Atlanta.

“We have been telling our clients for 20 years, probably, you ought to be able to control the neighborho­od around your ballpark,” Spear said in an interview. “And other major league baseball teams have been able to do that, but these guys (at the Braves) didn’t just control it — they designed it.

“We didn’t design the rest of their developmen­t — we just designed the ballpark — but from the start they made it clear they wanted … the ballpark to really harmonize and work well with all this other developmen­t activity. … One of the things the Braves wanted was a traditiona­l ballpark that fit that developmen­t. We, of course, took that to heart. That’s what you design toward, and I’m just really happy with how that turned out.”

Spear’s design portfolio includes Baltimore’s Oriole Park at Camden Yards, San Francisco’s AT&T Park and Colorado’s Coors Field, among other stadiums.

Some of the features of SunTrust Park that Spear mentioned as important might escape the untrained eye, such as the combinatio­n of three colors of brick and the considerab­le space between the canopy and the top row of seats.

“We left that gap between the sunscreen and the last row of seats because psychologi­cally it feels like there would be more air circulatio­n,” he said. “I think that’s a key feature.”

Another question for Spear as he stood in front of the Braves’ dugout: Do you see anything in the stadium at this point that you would change?

“No, I don’t think so,” he said. “We had a good team (working on the project), and we had great clients, too.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY JASON GETZ ?? It’s not an official opening, but fans get their first chance to catch a game at SunTrust Park as the Braves take on the Yankees in an exhibition. Braves officials toured many stadiums early in the design process, identifyin­g elements they wanted to adapt.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY JASON GETZ It’s not an official opening, but fans get their first chance to catch a game at SunTrust Park as the Braves take on the Yankees in an exhibition. Braves officials toured many stadiums early in the design process, identifyin­g elements they wanted to adapt.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@ AJC.COM ?? Former Braves manager Bobby Cox (front) joins the festivitie­s, waving to fans with current skipper Brian Snitker.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@ AJC.COM Former Braves manager Bobby Cox (front) joins the festivitie­s, waving to fans with current skipper Brian Snitker.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@ AJC.COM ?? Bartolo Colon, expected to be a key contributo­r in the Braves rotation, delivered the first pitches in an 8-5 victory over the Yankees.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@ AJC.COM Bartolo Colon, expected to be a key contributo­r in the Braves rotation, delivered the first pitches in an 8-5 victory over the Yankees.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Manager Brian Snitker meets with the media in the Braves’ new home as they prepare to take on the Yankees in an exhibition.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Manager Brian Snitker meets with the media in the Braves’ new home as they prepare to take on the Yankees in an exhibition.

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