Oh well. I'm done trying to add anything to a conversation with Cubs fans. Enjoy battling year in and year out for spots 2-4 in the NL central. GO CARDS!
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Well that solves that issue.
I'm a Cardinals fan, so my opinion probably means nothing on this subject. However, I've seen stadiums like Busch, Miller, Target, which have great architectural features that capture the essence of a city, and the fanbase, while providing amenities that make it a fun experience for returning fans who attend multiple games at the ballpark. Wrigley Field is a place everyone wants to see once, but probably isn't a place a person wants to spend multiple days a year in.
The Cubs need to either: A) rebuild Wrigley on the same site, or B) Keep Wrigley as a historical site with maybe 10 games/ year played in the building and build a new stadium relatively close, perhaps on the shores of Lake Michigan on Lakeshore Drive, or somewhere in relative proximity to the area.
Rebuilding on the Wrigley site IS possible... just go to Target Field to see how they fit that glorious ballpark into such a tiny space. However, the success of ballparks such as ATnT ballpark in San Francisco could also be a good model for the Cubs if they built a ballpark on the Lake, or somewhere else in North Chicago. The one thing that the Cubs should NOT do is build a ballpark like Kauffman or Miller in the middle of a parking lot. Stadiums surrounded by parking lots and no businesses/ bars/ establishments are for football, not baseball.
There's just too much history with that neighborhood.
To me it loses its nostalgic if it is only a landmark and not used as a ballpark.
You do realize that the neighborhood "history" as you know it is about 15 years old.
You do realize that the neighborhood "history" as you know it is about 15 years old.
The new Busch Stadium was built on the already existing stadium property, which was acquired and cleared way back in the 60s. They moved the stadium footprint on the larger property and reconfigured the parking.
Wrigley is surrounded by valuable real estate. Going west where the McDonalds is now has some merit. I don't know what all is in that block, but there's nothing special about a McDonald's. Clark Street would have to be closed. Otherwise, the stadium is surrounded by property that is in large part just as historic and as valuable as Wrigley.
Most new urban stadiums are built by using eminent domain to acquire slums or rundown industrial areas and revitalizing. People get behind that because you're converting a negative into a positive. It wouldn't be like that in Wrigleyville.
personally if i were the cubs id tear that hell hole down and try to forget the last 100+ years of failure. a fresh start would be good for that team. get rid of the goat, bartman (sp?), and everything other stupid excuse cubs fans have for being a terrible team. get rid of the ivy and everything that makes the stadium old. the yankees had good history so it made sense to bring some of the old charm over into the new stadium. the cubs...not so much. get rid of it all and start over
you do realize I wasn't referring to the bars and businesses as "history" How many other ballparks can fans of the team who aren't from that city name the streets surrounding the ballpark?
That "baseball person" that is linked to this article was Peter Gammons. He hates Wrigley Field. He blasted it last month in an interview.
They won't replace it. They' do what they did with Fenway.
and Wrigley outsells just about everyone in the League.