Rogers_Centre Rogers_Centre

Rogers Centre - Definition and Overview

Rogers Centre
SkyDome
Overhead view of Rogers Centre with
roof closed, seen from the CN Tower.
Facility Statistics
Location1 Blue Jays Way
Toronto, Ontario M5V 1J3
Broke GroundOctober 3, 1986
OpenedJune 5, 1989
SurfaceAstroTurf/FieldTurf
OwnerRogers Communications/ Toronto Blue Jays
Construction Cost$570 million CAD
ArchitectsRod Robbie, Michael Allen
Tenants
Toronto Argonauts1989-present
Toronto Blue Jays1989-present
Toronto Raptors1995-1999
Seating Capacity
2004 Baseball50,516
2004 CFL Football53,506
Baseball Field Dimensions
Foul Lines328 ft / 100 m
Power Alleys375 ft / 114 m
Center Field400 ft / 122 m
Backstop60 ft / 18 m

The Rogers Centre (until recently called SkyDome), which opened on June 1, 1989, is a huge ballpark in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, situated next to the CN Tower near the shores of Lake Ontario. There is significant public opposition to renaming SkyDome to Rogers Centre. It is the stadium where the Toronto Blue Jays play baseball and the Toronto Argonauts play Canadian football. It is also the home of many special events that require very large venues, including what is believed (in 2003) to be the world's largest book reading, by Harry Potter author J. K. Rowling, on 24th October 2000. It was one of the first stadiums in the world to have a fully retractable motorized roof. It can seat 53,506 people at a football game. SkyDome also has a hotel.

The Rogers Centre was designed by Rod Robbie and Michael Allan and was constructed by Ellis-Don Construction of Toronto. The stadium's construction lasted just over three years, from April 1986 to May 1989. The approximate cost of construction was $600 million (Cdn) which was paid for by the Canadian federal government, Ontario provincial government, and a large consortium of corporations. Though nominally a multi-purpose stadium the primary impetus for its construction was the need for a new baseball stadium for the Blue Jays, who until 1989 played in the wholly inadequate Exhibition Stadium.

The Rogers Centre was the first major team sports arena in North America to sport a fully retractable roof. It is also well known for its enormous Jumbotron scoreboard, at 10 by 35 metres the largest scoreboard in the world. It is the tallest and most massive stadium used by any Major League Baseball team.

In the early 1990s the consortium of companies that had built the stadium had amassed a huge debt and a massive, and controversial, government bail-out was given them. However, by 2004, Rogers Communications, parent company of the Blue Jays, agreed to acquire SkyDome from Sportco International, LP for about $25 million CAD (about $21.24 million USD) which was 1/24 the cost of construction.

On February 2, 2005 Ted Rogers, President and CEO of Rogers Communications, which owns the Blue Jays, announced that his company will significantly increase the Blue Jays team payroll to the tune of $210 million over the next three seasons, starting in 2005 and annouced a three year corporate contract to change the name on SkyDome to the Rogers Centre.

The Toronto Blue Jays announced as part of the Rogers Centre, they will erect a new state of the art, integrated scoring and display system replacing the Jumbotron. The Rogers Centre features a new artificial playing surface starting in the 2005 season called FieldTurf.

Usage note: Canadians typically do not say the SkyDome; correct usage is SkyDome, without an article. This usage has been more or less accepted in the USA, especially by ESPN.

See also: List of Major League Baseball stadiums

More images of the Rogers Centre

The Rogers Centre is visible at left in these photos.

External link

Rogers Centre - World's Greatest Entertainment Centre (http://www.rogerscentre.com/)

 

Toronto landmarks
CN Tower | Rogers Centre | Toronto City Hall | Old City Hall | Nathan Phillips Square | Air Canada Centre | PATH Underground | Toronto Islands | Exhibition Place | Toronto Zoo | Canadian Broadcasting Centre | Art Gallery of Ontario | Royal Ontario Museum | Ontario Place | Canon Theatre | Elgin & Winter Garden Theatre | Hummingbird Centre | Queen's Park | Dundas Square | St. Michael's Cathedral | St. James' Cathedral


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