| Baseball Parks Go High Tech |
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Technology hits a home run for ballparks. Feeling very confident and positive, Technology steps up to the plate, bat in hand. Bases are loaded; it is home run time. The game plan is working. On first base is fan satisfaction. On second base is design and construction. On third base is operations. And Technology wants to bring them all home. Here comes a curve ball; Technology swings and connects. The ball is high and long and over the wall. Home Run!!!!!
First Base = Fan Satisfaction
Scoreboards It seems that Jumbotrons, giant video scoreboards, and loud techno music are becoming an expected part of the game of baseball - just like peanuts and Cracker Jacks. The Arizona Diamondbacks use ten video walls to share a mixture of player interviews, commentators' interviews, big plays over the years, and other historical footage.
Internet Access PacBell Park Web Stations allow users to send or receive e-mail, check movie schedules, make dinner reservations, research baseball statistics, and check up on the headlines of the day. Arizona Diamondbacks' new stadium is described as part museum and part high-tech showplace. This stadium's interactive kiosks invite fans to tap into nostalgia video as well as the Internet.
Ticket Swapping
New Amenities
Second Base = Design and Construction In Seattle, the new field at Safeco features a uniquely designed retractable roof that guarantees fans will not miss a game called for rain. This roof was designed to cover the ballpark but not enclose it. The new stadium planned for Houston, Enron Field, also has a retractable roof that will cost $65 million. It takes only twelve minutes to open or close the roof, and the movement is so quiet it will not interrupt the game. The Mets ballpark has gone one step further. To be built in Flushing, New York, the Mets stadium is being designed with a retractable roof that will cover the playing field's grass surface. The playing field itself is to be built on a retractable platform. The portable grass platform is designed to allow the entire playing field to be rolled out into the parking lot to accommodate other events at the stadium without harming the ballfield's turf.
Third Base = Operations Technology even comes to the aid of food and beverage operators. In Seattle at the ballpark's Lucent Terrace Club section, vendors order food and beverage on handheld computers. Digital cash registers, right in the aisles, accept credit cards as payment. In the future, credit card style tickets will get fans into the ballpark and then will be used to purchase peanuts and Cracker Jacks and the ever popular team memorabilia. Technology will also make it possible to better monitor concessions. Computers will alert operators when more hotdogs and more buns are needed on the upper concourse. The Detroit Tigers are planning a new baseball stadium that will offer 1,000 computer-equipped seats. Fans lucky enough to be in these seats right behind home plate can check player statistics and order food right from their seats. The Ballparks.com site offers complete details on wired ballparks for both American and National league teams built or planned for Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, Cincinnati, Houston, San Diego, New York, and Detroit. (This site also supplies links to the MBL teams themselves.)
Technology Helping Players
So Technology can make a leisurely jog around all bases to enjoy the
crowd's appreciation and know it has knocked the ball out of the park.
 
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