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Busch Stadium (also referred to informally as "New Busch Stadium" or "Busch Stadium III") is a baseball stadium located in St. Louis, Missouri. It is the home of Major League Baseball's St. Louis Cardinals. It has a seating capacity of 44,383, [2] with 3,706 club seats and 61 luxury suites.
Busch Memorial Stadium (Busch Stadium II) was a multi-purpose sports facility in St. Louis, Missouri, that operated for 40 years, from 1966 through 2005. [4] Built as Civic Center Busch Memorial Stadium, its official name was shortened to Busch Stadium in January 1982. [5]
The ballpark (by then known as Busch Stadium, but still commonly called Sportsman's Park) was also the home to professional football: in 1923, it hosted St. Louis' first NFL team, the All-Stars, and later hosted the St. Louis Cardinals of the National Football League from 1960 (following the team's relocation from Chicago) until 1965, with ...
Busch Stadium (III) Busch Stadium (II) Sportsman's Park a.k.a. Busch Stadium (I) Robison Field Sportsman's Park Chronology of names: St. Louis Base Ball Park, 1868-1874 Grand Avenue Park, 1874-1881 Sportsman's Park, 1881-1893 Old Sportsman's Park, 1893-1898 Athletic Park, 1898-1902 Sportsman's Park, 1902-1953 Busch Stadium (I), 1953-1966
The Dome at America's Center is a multi-purpose stadium used for concerts, major conventions, and sporting events in downtown St. Louis, Missouri, United States.Previously known as the Trans World Dome from 1995 to 2001 and the Edward Jones Dome from 2002 to 2016, it was constructed largely to lure a National Football League (NFL) team to St. Louis and to serve as a convention space.
Thousands of seats have vanished from Paycor Stadium. No need to panic, Bengals fans, columnist Jason Williams explains. Williams' inbox: Why seats are missing at Cincinnati Bengals' Paycor Stadium
Located on the 200 and 300 blocks of Clark Street, it sits across the street from and is meant to complement Busch Stadium, the team's home field, on the site of the demolished Busch Memorial Stadium. [1] Proposed in the late 1990s, the development was executed in two phases by primary developer Cordish Company of Baltimore, Maryland.
It is located on the Busch Campus at Rutgers, and overlooks the Raritan River to the South. The stadium was opened as Rutgers Stadium on September 3, 1994, [3] when the Rutgers Scarlet Knights hosted the Kent State Golden Flashes. It currently seats 52,454 spectators after a 2009 expansion in the south end zone student section.