Five County Stadium

Five County Stadium
Location 1501 NC Highway 39
Zebulon, North Carolina 27597
United States
Coordinates 35°49′2″N 78°16′12″W / 35.81722°N 78.27000°W / 35.81722; -78.27000Coordinates: 35°49′2″N 78°16′12″W / 35.81722°N 78.27000°W / 35.81722; -78.27000
Owner Wake County
Operator Carolina Mudcats Professional Baseball Club, Inc.
Capacity 6,500
Field size Left Field: 330 ft
Center Field: 400 ft
Right Field: 309 ft
Surface Grass
Construction
Broke ground January 19, 1991[1]
Built 1991
Opened July 3, 1991[2]
Renovated 1999
Expanded 1999
Construction cost $2.5 million
($4.35 million in 2016 dollars[3])
Architect Odell Associates
Structural engineer Excel Engineering[4]
General contractor Richard Beach Builders, Inc
Tenants
Carolina Mudcats (CL) (2012–present)
Carolina Mudcats (SL) (1991–2011)

Five County Stadium is a baseball stadium located in Zebulon, North Carolina; a suburb of Raleigh. It is the home of the Carolina Mudcats of the Carolina League. The ballpark, which was opened in 1991 and extensively renovated in 1999, has a capacity of 6,500.

The stadium's name comes from its location the stadium property is located in Wake County, but it is in close proximity to the intersection of the county lines between Wake, Franklin, Nash and Johnston Counties. Wilson County is also in the general area of the stadium.

US-264 passes by the stadium at a generally northwest-to-southeast angle (behind left and center fields), while State Highway 39 skirts the east side of the property (right field). Parking lots surround the field on the other sides, and a large grass field, often used as a campground, lies behind home plate.

History

When Columbus Mudcats owner Steve Bryant moved the club to North Carolina in 1991, he wanted a new facility that was deemed to be outside the territories of other minor league clubs in the state (including the Carolina League's Greensboro Hornets, which he also owned) while also being easily accessible by the public. A site was chosen in Zebulon, which was as close to Raleigh as the Mudcats could get without infringing on the territorial rights of the Durham Bulls. To construct the ballpark quickly, the builders opted for metal seating rather than the traditional concrete. The 1999 renovation replaced most of the metal with concrete.

The Double-A Mudcats moved to Pensacola in 2011, and the Carolina League's Kinston Indians moved to Zebulon and took the Mudcats name.

Images

field layout
field layout 
the infield of Five County Stadium during a game
The Mudcats (in white) play the Montgomery Biscuits 
the outfield of Five County Stadium during a game
Outfield being patrolled by the visiting Montgomery Biscuits 
view from the first base stands
View of the field from the first base stands, looking towards the left-field wall 

References

  1. Northington, Tom (January 20, 1991). "Time Crucial for Triple-A Hopes". News & Record. Greensboro. Retrieved September 17, 2011.
  2. "Five County Stadium". Triangle Source. Retrieved September 17, 2011.
  3. Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Community Development Project. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Retrieved October 21, 2016.
  4. "Five County Stadium". Trus Steel. Retrieved February 24, 2014.

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.