Location within Wisconsin | |
Location | 2231 Holmgren Way, Ashwaubenon, Wisconsin[1] |
---|---|
Coordinates | 44°29′22″N 88°03′30″W / 44.48944°N 88.05833°W |
Public transit | Green Bay Metro |
Owner | Village of Ashwaubenon |
Operator | Big Top Baseball |
Executive suites | 6 indoor, 16-person suites[1] Club with 200 exterior seats[2] |
Capacity | 3,359 (expandable to 7,000) |
Field size | Left Field: 338 feet (103 m) Left Center Field: 415 feet (126 m) Right Center Field: 386 feet (118 m) Right Field: 282 feet (86 m)[2] |
Surface | artificial turf[3] |
Scoreboard | 20 feet 7 inches (6.27 m) high (not yet operational)[2] |
Construction | |
Broke ground | September 14, 2018[4] |
Built | September 2018–May 2019[5] |
Opened | June 1, 2019[7][8] |
Construction cost | $14 million[2] |
Architect | Pendulum[6] |
Project manager | RODAC Construction[6] |
Tenants | |
Green Bay Rockers (NWL) 2019–present Green Bay Voyageurs FC (USL2) 2019, 2021 Green Bay Glory (USLW) 2022–present |
Capital Credit Union Park is a multi-purpose stadium in Ashwaubenon, Wisconsin, a suburb of Green Bay. The stadium is home to the Green Bay Rockers collegiate summer baseball team of the Northwoods League;[1] the Green Bay Glory women's soccer team of the USL W League (USLW);[9] and a variety of community athletic and social events.[1] The Green Bay Voyageurs FC men's soccer team of the USL League Two played at the stadium in 2019[10][11] and 2021.[12]
The Voyageurs christened the stadium with a 3–0 win over WSA Winnipeg on the morning of June 1, 2019 in a game postponed a day by rain.[7][8] Later that day, the baseball team, then named the Green Bay Booyah, lost their inaugural home opener 12–6 to the Wisconsin Rapids Rafters.[13]
For baseball, site constraints limit the distances to center and right field, a problem addressed with a high outfield wall. The height of the wall was announced as 19-feet, 19-inches in a nod to the nearby Green Bay Packers' inaugural season in 1919,[14] but it has also been reported as 22 feet.[5] The wall is made of shipping containers, chosen as being relatively inexpensive and able to handle a high wind load.[3] Going along with the baseball team's 2019–2021 name, the ballpark features the world's largest booyah kettle (2,000 gallons).[15]
Baseball team owner Big Top Baseball has committed to a 23-year lease, paying $500,000 up-front[2] and $205,000 annually for five years followed by 1% increases annually for the remaining years.[6]