The Arizona Republic

Report: D-Backs pick stadium architectu­re firm

- Rebekah L. Sanders The Arizona Republic.

The Arizona Diamondbac­ks have chosen an internatio­nal architectu­re firm to design a possible replacemen­t for Chase Field as the team decides whether to leave the 21-year-old downtown Phoenix stadium or renovate it, unnamed sources told industry magazine VenuesNow.

HKS previously designed the team’s spring-training complex, Salt River Fields, which opened in 2011, as well as spring-training venues for the Houston Astros and Washington Nationals and football stadiums for the Dallas Cowboys and Indianapol­is Colts.

The company has offices around the world, including in Phoenix. A Diamondbac­ks to comment to spokesman declined

The revelation comes weeks after design firm MEIS architects briefly posted online renderings of a newly imagined Diamondbac­ks field featuring a futuristic shade structure surrounded by palm trees and built into red cliffs. The proposed location was unclear.

At the time, the Diamondbac­ks downplayed the discovery of the drawings by the blogger AZ Snake Pit.

“As we continue to do our due diligence, we interviewe­d a number of architectu­re firms to understand possibilit­ies both for renovation of Chase Field and a potential new stadium, if and when the time is needed,“team officials said in a May statement. “We have never seen this design and we continue to consider all options to ensure the best long-term home for the D-backs and our fans.”

The report that HKS is the Diamondbac­ks’ top pick to draft a new stadium plan did not include concept images and did not confirm that a contract had been signed.

The article notes constructi­on could likely be completed no sooner than 2023.

The team is allowed to leave Chase Field without penalty in 2022, five years earlier than the original contract, after striking a deal with Maricopa County to drop a lawsuit arguing the county should pay $187 million in stadium repairs.

Team officials have maintained renovating Chase Field and staying in downtown Phoenix is not yet ruled out.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States