Stadium Name: | AdventHealth Stadium |
Former Names: | State Mutual Stadium (2003-2022) |
Location: | 755 Braves Boulevard Rome, GA 30161 |
Coordinates: | 34.2858°N -85.1672°W |
Broke Ground: | April 16, 2002[1] |
Opened: | April 6, 2003[2] |
Owner: | Floyd County |
Operator: | Rome Emperors |
Surface: | Natural Grass (Tifway 419 Bermuda) |
Construction Cost: | $19 million[3] ($ in dollars) |
Architect: | Brisbin Brook Beynon, Ltd. |
Services Engineer: | Mulvey & Banani International Inc.[4] |
General Contractor: | H&M Construction[5] |
Tenants: | Rome Emperors (SAL/High-A East) 2003–present |
Seating Capacity: | 5,105 |
Dimensions: | Left Field: 335 feet Center Field: 401 feet Right Field: 330 feet |
AdventHealth Stadium,[6] located in Rome, Georgia, has been the home of the Rome Emperors, of the South Atlantic League, since its completion in April 2003. The facility seats 5,105 people.
At the end of the 2002 season, the Atlanta Braves decided to move their Class A Macon Braves. The move came after disputes between the city of Macon and the team over a new ballpark. The city of Rome, Georgia was able to get the approval of SPLOST and lure the Braves to Rome. Using completely SPLOST tax the ballpark was funded and was ready for use in the 2003 season. The construction cost $19 million which is worth $26.7 million in 2020. The stadium has undergone many renovations, the most recent being in 2021. The renovation included a new video board, brand new speaker system, led lights, and more.
The naming rights were sold to Rome-based State Mutual Insurance Company on February 28, 2003.[7] The terms of the agreement were $250,000 for 18 years.[8] In April 2022, the naming rights were sold to non-profit health care system AdventHealth.[9]
The stadium contains 14 luxury suites, a full-service restaurant, and a group pavilion. The playing field dimensions are a mirror of the parent club's former home, Turner Field, which is a mere 70miles away. Among other reasons, the (relatively) large size of the playing field helps this to be among the least home run-friendly parks in all of minor-league baseball.[10] The stadium is comparable to the Lexington Legends Whitaker Bank Ballpark which was designed by the same architects. The stadium also includes the Miller Lite Marina which is a party deck located down the left field foul line that is decked out with a boat overlooking the field.