Ottawa Stadium Explained

Ottawa Stadium
Former Names:Raymond Chabot Grant Thornton Park (2015–2018)
Ottawa Baseball Stadium (2008–2015)
Ottawa Rapidz Stadium (2008)
Lynx Stadium (2003–2007)
JetForm Park (1993–2002)
Location:300 Coventry Rd
Ottawa, ON K1K 4P5
Publictransit: Tremblay station
Owner:City of Ottawa
Capacity:10,332
Dimensions:Left Field – 325feet
Centre Field – 404feet
Right Field – 325feet
Alleys – 380feet
Surface:Grass
Tenants:Ottawa Lynx (IL) 1993–2007
Ottawa Rapidz (CAL) 2008
Ottawa Fat Cats (IBL) 2010–2012
Ottawa Champions (CAL) 2015–2019
Ottawa Titans (FL) 2022–present

Ottawa Stadium is a baseball stadium in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, with a seating capacity of 10,332.[1] The stadium is located in the city's east end near the interchange of Queensway and Vanier Parkway. It has been used for minor-league professional baseball and music concerts since 1993.

History

The stadium was built to house the Ottawa Lynx of the International League and opened prior to the 1993 season. In its first season, the Lynx sold out 43 games and set an International League attendance record by averaging 9,772 fans per game. However, annual attendance steadily declined from there, except for a modest increase in 2001. By 2006, Ottawa had the lowest average attendance in the league.[2] The Lynx relocated after the 2007 season.

After the departure of the Lynx, the City of Ottawa considered other proposals for the site but kept the stadium as a baseball facility for the following season. Among the proposals rejected by the city in 2007 were:

A new team, the Ottawa Rapidz of the Can-Am League, was established in December 2007 and began to play in 2008. Despite attracting higher attendance than the Lynx in its final season, the Rapidz declared bankruptcy on 29 September 2009.[4] A new team, the Voyageurs, was announced by the Can-Am league for the 2009 season. However, the league was faced with a lack of prospective owners for the team and with declining economic conditions and disbanded the Voyageurs in March 2009.[5]

The stadium remained unused in 2009 except for a late-August series of community baseball games sponsored by Ottawa city councillor Bob Monette.[6] Earlier, following the demise of the Voyageurs, Monette had suggested that the stadium be dismantled and the land sold to generate funds which could be applied to a new sports venue.[7]

In August 2009, area businessmen Dave Butler and Duncan MacDonald presented a proposal which would renovate the existing stadium facility for activities throughout the year, including use as a venue for Winterlude.[8]

In January 2010, the Intercounty Baseball League voted 6–2 in favour of presenting the Ottawa Stadium Group with an expansion franchise that would play at the Ottawa Baseball Stadium[9] On 10 March 2010, the IBL confirmed that the application for an IBL expansion franchise had been accepted.[10] The new team, the Ottawa Fat Cats, played from 2010 through 2012.[11]

After spending two years negotiating with various ownership groups to bring a double-A baseball franchise to Ottawa, including a prospective deal with Mandalay Baseball which required the city to invest $40 million in stadium renovations, the city signed a ten-year lease with the Can-Am League to field a team in 2015, named the Ottawa Champions, however the Can-Am League merged with the Frontier League after the 2019 season and the Champions were left off the 2020 Frontier League schedule, leaving the stadium again without a tenant.[12] [13] [14]

In September 2020, the addition of a Frontier League team in Ottawa was announced, with a lease to play at RCGT Park.[15] [16]

During the Freedom Convoy 2022 protests, the Titans permitted the city to permit protester's use of the parking lot for one weekend, an attempt to alleviate congestion. Protesters instead set up a long term supply centre at the facility.[17]

Branding

Ottawa company JetForm first bought the naming rights to the stadium in 1993[18] and it was called JetForm Park. The name was changed to Lynx Stadium after the 2002 season when JetForm changed its name to Accelio. For the 2008 season, the Rapidz marketed the stadium as Rapidz Stadium. From 2008-2015, it was known as Ottawa Stadium.

On 12 March 2015, it was announced that accounting firm Raymond Chabot Grant Thornton had signed a three-year naming rights deal, renaming the stadium "Raymond Chabot Grant Thornton Park".[19] [20]

Design

The stadium is in the split-level design, with a concourse running around the middle of the seating bowl. This concourse is at street level, so fans in the "lower" seats walk down, and fans in the "upper" seats walk up. All seats are blue chair-back models. Concessions, restrooms, a gift shop, and a kids' play area are located along a wider concourse (also at street level) located underneath the upper seats.

The stadium also features skyboxes and the "Upper Deck" restaurant (No longer operational) perched behind home plate. The windows do not open, there is no outdoor seating at this level. Access is by elevator from the concourse below. This room is now labelled an event space, can be booked for parties of 50 plus. There are open-air picnic tables down the left-field line which are also available to all fans.

Coventry Road runs along the left-field fence, and games can easily be seen from the street while driving or walking. There is less than 50feet of buffer between the stadium wall and the road, so flying balls can occasionally pose a hazard to passing cars.

Concerts

Concerts have been held at the stadium on rare occasions:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ottawa Stadium . Ottawa Titans Baseball Club . October 18, 2023 . en.
  2. News: Baseball Lynx to stay in Ottawa, for now . 25 August 2006 . 7 September 2009 . .
  3. News: Businessman reveals ambitious plans for Lynx Stadium . 3 September 2007 . 3 September 2007 . Roman . Zakaluzny . . https://web.archive.org/web/20070928061259/http://www.ottawabusinessjournal.com/289740073760027.php . 28 September 2007.
  4. News: Ottawa Rapidz go under . 30 September 2008 . . 7 September 2009 .
  5. News: Owner making play for another Ottawa pro baseball team . 21 August 2009 . . 7 September 2009 .
  6. News: Ottawa stadium to be idle no more / Monette arranges for area teams to play games at field . Darren . Desaulniers . Ottawa Citizen . 29 August 2009 . 7 September 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090901011421/http://www.ottawacitizen.com/sports/Ottawa+stadium+idle+more/1942743/story.html . 1 September 2009 .
  7. News: Councillors consider tearing down baseball stadium . . 1 April 2009 . 7 September 2009 .
  8. News: New Ottawa baseball pitch lands at city . 24 August 2009 . 7 September 2009 . .
  9. Web site: Baseball returns to play in Ottawa Stadium. 26 February 2010. Ottawa.
  10. IBL CONFIRMS OTTAWA ENTRY FOR 2010 SEASON – 3/10/2010 . Intercounty Baseball League . 10 March 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110706205439/http://www.theibl.ca/tml/content/NewsArticle.aspx?newsid=512&page=1&categoryid=0&year=2010 . 6 July 2011.
  11. News: Pro baseball returns to the plate in Ottawa . Ottawa Citizen . Ken . Warren . 11 June 2014 . 13 March 2015.
  12. News: Reevely . David . Ottawa's Double-A baseball dream is dead . Ottawa Citizen . Ottawa . 23 September 2013 . 19 July 2014 .
  13. News: Brownlee . Mark . Double-A baseball team off the table for Ottawa . Ottawa Business Journal . Ottawa . 25 September 2013 . 19 July 2014 .
  14. News: Warren . Ken . Pro baseball is back in Ottawa and they're already Champions . Ottawa Citizen . Ottawa . 16 June 2014 . 19 July 2014 .
  15. News: Reichard . Kevin . Frontier League returns to Ottawa in 2021 . 26 September 2020 . Ballpark Digest . August Publications . 25 September 2020.
  16. News: Baines . Tim . PLAY BALL! Sam Katz confident baseball will be a hit in Ottawa when it returns next year . 26 September 2020 . . 23 September 2020 . en-CA.
  17. News: Trinn . Judy . How organizers with police and military expertise may be helping Ottawa convoy protest dig in . 10 February 2022 . CBC News . Canadian Broadcasting Corporation . 9 February 2022 . Toronto ON.
  18. News: Spedden . Zach . Ottawa Champions Could Seek Ballpark Upgrades . 26 March 2024 . Ballpark Digest . August Publications . 16 February 2017.
  19. Web site: Ottawa Champions Baseball Club and Raymond Chabot Grant Thornton Announce Naming Rights for Ottawa Stadium . . 12 March 2015 . 12 March 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150402095903/http://www.ottawachampions.com/en/ottawa-champions-baseball-club-and-raymond-chabot-grant-thornton-announce-naming-rights-for-ottawa-stadium/ . 2 April 2015.
  20. News: Provencher . Norman . Champions say Welcome to Parc Raymond Chabot Grant Thornton Park . October 18, 2023 . Ottawa Citizen . March 12, 2015 . The cost of the three-year naming rights deal was not released..
  21. Molson Brings Summer Snow, Music . 9 July 2002 . Billboard . 13 March 2015 .
  22. News: Lynx Stadium, Ottawa – July 5, 2007 . https://archive.today/20120709204722/http://jam.canoe.ca/Music/Artists/N/Nickelback/ConcertReviews/2007/07/06/4317819-sun.html . usurped . 9 July 2012 . . Ann Marie . McQueen . 6 July 2007 .