Mac Rating: 0.00 | Votes: | Date: 03/06/2026 14:31:00
On the China Basin waterfront in the South Beach neighbourhood of San Francisco, Oracle Park is the home stadium of the San Francisco Giants of Major League Baseball and one of the most beautifully sited ballparks in the league. The 41,915-seat venue opened in April 2000 as Pacific Bell Park at a cost of around 357 million dollars, with subsequent corporate naming-rights changes to SBC Park, AT&T Park and finally Oracle Park in January 2019. The park was the first privately financed major-league ballpark built in the United States since the original Dodger Stadium in 1962. The ballpark's defining feature is its setting along the waterfront. The right-field stands back directly onto McCovey Cove, a small inlet of San Francisco Bay named for the Hall of Fame Giants first baseman Willie McCovey, into which left-handed batters can hit home runs that splash dramatically into the bay (those that clear the right-field stands are formally classified as "Splash Hits", with a digital counter atop the right-field bleachers tracking the running total). Beyond the cove, the park features several other much-photographed quirks. The 24-foot Coca-Cola bottle slide and the giant baseball glove in left-centre field, built as a tribute to the four Giants left-fielders in the Hall of Fame, are popular family attractions. The 24-foot left-field wall acknowledges the Giants hero Willie Mays's uniform number, and the centre-field flagpole stands at 421 feet to honour the same Hall of Fame outfielder. The Giants won their first three World Series at the ballpark in 2010, 2012 and 2014, lending the venue a particular sense of recent triumph that complements the team's long pre-San Francisco history dating back to the original New York Giants of 1883. Beyond Giants games, the park hosts an extensive concert series each summer with major touring artists, the Bay Area's annual college football bowl game and a popular wintertime ice-skating rink. Stadium tours run on most non-game days and cover the dugouts, press box, Giants Hall of Fame and the field itself.
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