Roger Dean Stadium
Full name | Roger Dean Stadium |
---|---|
Location | 4751 Main Street Jupiter, Florida 33458 (561) 775-1818 |
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Owner | Palm Beach County |
Operator | Jupiter Stadium Limited[1] |
Capacity | 6,871[2] |
Field size | Left Field: 335 ft Left-Center: 380 ft Center Field: 400 ft Right-Center: 375 ft Right Field: 325 ft |
Surface | Grass |
Construction | |
Broke ground | March 6, 1997[1] |
Opened | February 28, 1998 |
Construction cost | $28 million ($40.7 million in 2025 dollars[3]) |
Architect | Populous |
Structural engineer | Bliss & Nyitray, Inc. |
Services engineer | Bredson & Associates, Inc.[4] |
General contractor | Case Contracting Company |
Tenants | |
Jupiter Hammerheads (FSL) (1998–present) Palm Beach Cardinals (FSL) (2003–present) St. Louis Cardinals (MLB) (spring training) (1998–present) Miami Marlins (MLB) (spring training) (2003–present) GCL Cardinals (GCL) (1998–present) GCL Marlins (GCL) (2003–present) Montreal Expos (MLB) (spring training) (1998–2002) |
Roger Dean Stadium is a baseball stadium located in the Abacoa community of the town of Jupiter, Florida. The stadium was built in 1998, holds 6,871 people,[2] and features luxury sky-box seating, two levels of permanent seating, parking and concessions. The Roger Dean Stadium Complex is the only stadium in the country to host four minor league teams: the Jupiter Hammerheads and Palm Beach Cardinals of the Class A-Advanced Baseball Florida State League, and the Gulf Coast Marlins and Gulf Coast Cardinals of the Rookie-level Gulf Coast League.
Roger Dean Stadium is the only stadium in Florida to host two Major League Baseball teams annually for spring training: the Miami Marlins and St. Louis Cardinals. The teams share the main stadium where the games are played. However, the teams have their own practice fields, outdoor batting cages, several pitching mounds, and state-of-the-art conditioning rooms.
History
Through 2002 the Montreal Expos shared the stadium with the Cardinals, until they swapped with the Marlins as part of the Marlins sale to Jeffrey Loria. The Expos, now known as the Washington Nationals, then moved to Space Coast Stadium in Viera, FL.
Roger Dean Stadium was badly damaged in 2004 by hurricanes Frances and Jeanne.[5]
Cliff Politte threw the first pitch in the stadium's history in spring training, 1998.[6]
In September 2012, the stadium hosted a qualifying round for the 2013 World Baseball Classic. Spain, France, Israel, and South Africa took part in the qualifier.[7]
References
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External links
- Roger Dean Stadium Official website
- Stadium Fact Sheet
- Miami Marlins Spring Training Ballpark
- St. Louis Cardinals Spring Training Ballpark
- Roger Dean Stadium Minor League Ball Parks
- Roger Dean Stadium Views – Ball Parks of the Minor Leagues
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- Pages with reference errors
- Minor league baseball venues
- Spring training ballparks
- Grapefruit League venues
- Miami Marlins spring training venues
- Montreal Expos spring training venues
- St. Louis Cardinals spring training venues
- Baseball venues in Florida
- Sports venues completed in 1998
- Jupiter, Florida
- Sports venues in Palm Beach County, Florida
- NAIA World Series venues
- 1998 establishments in Florida