Dodger Stadium
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Set in a natural bowl in the Chavez Ravine hills just north of downtown Los Angeles, Dodger Stadium has been the home of the Los Angeles Dodgers since it opened in 1962, and it is now the third-oldest ballpark in Major League Baseball, after Fenway Park and Wrigley Field. With a listed capacity of 56,000, it is also the largest baseball stadium in the world by seating, a figure the club has famously kept unchanged through decades of renovation. The stadium's arrival was not without controversy. The site was cleared of the established Mexican-American communities of Chavez Ravine through a drawn-out and bitter displacement before the Dodgers, newly moved from Brooklyn, built their ballpark there. The first game took place in April 1962, and the clean, mid-century modern design, with its wavy roof canopies and pastel seats, has aged into something of a classic. Its setting is part of the draw. Tiered terraces climb the hillside, palm trees ring the parking lots, and from the upper decks fans look out over the San Gabriel Mountains beyond the outfield. The Dodgers are among the best-supported teams in the sport, and the stadium has set attendance records and hosted World Series, All-Star Games and even Olympic baseball, along with concerts by major acts. For visitors a game here is a quintessential Los Angeles experience, complete with the much-mythologised Dodger Dog and a relaxed, sun-washed atmosphere. The hillside location makes it notoriously reliant on cars and prone to traffic, though shuttle services help, and the open views and warm evenings reward arriving early. Tickets can be hard to get for marquee opponents, while midweek games offer the easier seats. Recent years have brought big changes. A major renovation before the 2020 season added a landscaped centre-field plaza, wider concourses and new entry points, and the team won the World Series at home that year before largely empty stands during the pandemic. The ballpark is slated to host events at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, and a long-discussed aerial gondola from Union Station has been floated as a fix for its traffic. Beyond baseball, it remains a major concert venue.
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Type: Tourist Attraction
Address: 1000 Vin Scully Avenue, Los Angeles, CA, United States
Telephone: (323) 224-1500
Website: https://www.mlb.com/dodgers/ballpark
Capacity: 56000
Opening Date: 10/04/1962
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