I think this is just the right place for this sort of thing. Only big cities have the ability to draw large crowds to sporting events. A lot of people who like baseball like it enough to see a product that is lower grade than MLB if the priced right and convenient. This is why it will work in Malden, whereas it didn't in Brockton. The price for Rocks games was right, but who wants to go to Brockton? Only greater Boston has the population to support this, and support it we will.
Henry -- Malden is too close to Lowell -- you can't possibly expect two teams to survive that close to each other -- unless of course you could get the Yankees to take on an affiliation with one of the two minor league sites and the Red Sox keep a connection to the other
Awesome. I hope this works out.
Assuming the teams have equally good standings, who would rather go to Lowell from Metro Boston? Malden would be closer for most people if driving, and Lowell forces you to take the commuter rail only, for rapid transit. I don't think we'd starve off the Spinners, though, I'm sure they get a good pull from the Merrimac Valley and perhaps southern NH.
This seems to be a waste. How successful will they really be in luring a minor league team? The region already has plenty of them between Portland, Pawtucket and Lowell.
The Revolution badly need their own, much smaller stadium and this area would be a great place to build a nice 18-25,000 seat stadium. It could also double as a concert venue, host high school and college football, soccer and lacrosse games as well.
Red Bull Arena down in New Jersey should be the model.
Mass -- if you are going to build a stadium that makes more sense -- consider:
12,000 seats for soccer, high school football, lacrosse
with concerts in the summer on Friday nights
and the piece de resistance:
ice in the winter for outdoor hockey and other skating
surround it with some restaurants and sporting stores and you've got a year round use venue
The one place I've heard of with a really successful independent-league team is St. Paul, Minnesota -- despite the presence of the nearby major league Twins.
I think an independent team can be successful in Malden with the right group behind it. I don't think Lynn is a far comparison as Fraser Field sits in the middle of the neighborhood with limited parking and was a WPA project. The architectural firm that is going to build this ballpark has built many minor and pro ballparks and is one of the best at what they do. This is going to be a major league stadium just without as many seats.
Independent baseball has some success in areas where there are major league as well as other minor league teams - Long Island Ducks, Lancaster Barnstormers, Camden Rivershark etc.. The Atlantic League (the league which Malden is trying to get in) has a habit of going into densely populated suburbs and doing pretty well. Pawtucket, Portland and Lowell (I've been to all those parks and they're nothing special) all do well because they're affliated with the Red Sox. That being said, I think the Boston area can support a professional team not affliated with the Red Sox.
There are a lot of things in place that are in this group's favor - large diverse population, access to public transportation, ample off street parking, etc.. The success of the Red Sox has ruined the casual Red Sox fan - going to Fenway today is a place to be seen, socialize and sing Sweet Caroline between innings. True baseball fans and families on a budget looking for an affordable evening will make a ballpark in Malden a success. Taking a family of four to Fenway will cost $200, $250 or even $300 today? I'm sure that same family of four can get it done at a new ballpark in Malden for less than $100. The dogs are just as hot, the sausages just as sweet and the drinks are just as cold.
Let's face it, Malden's downtown needs SOMETHING to revitalize it. A new ballpark could very well be the centerpiece. Give people a reason to go to downtown Malden at night and hopefully it'll attract small business owners to come too - cafes, restuarants, etc.. I don't expect Malden Center to be the next Davis Square but with what a new ballpark could potentially bring, I think Malden Center could possibly be the New Malden Center.
Guapo -- Louisville, KY has an excellent minor league stadium which is busy most of the year. Of course they have somethings going for them:
1) the nearest major league team is in Cincinnati Ohio
2) they have a giant bat in front of the stadium associated with the Louisville Slugger bat manufactury
3) they have a museum and hall of fame including future Major League Hall of Famers who played in Louisville including Carlton Fisk
4) Half of the complex is an indoor function hall and restaurant
What beside the baseball itself is going to attract people to Malden -- if it is just the baseball then the place will be empty for 320+ days per year -- that's like a fair ground -- you just don't put such a dead spot downtown
Parcels targeted for new ballpark
Negotiations to begin with current owners
By Matt Byrne
Globe Correspondent / April 22, 2012
The developer of a proposed minor league baseball stadium told the Malden Redevelopment Authority last Tuesday that his group is planning to make offers by the end of April to buy three plots of land required to move forward on the $50 million project.
The properties are home to three businesses: L&L Services, a trucking and landscaping company at 11 Canal St.; Spadafora’s Auto Parts, 129 Charles St.; and Collex auto body repair, 124 Centre St. Together, they make up roughly a quarter of the 7-acre site primarily owned by National Grid, which is expected to lease its site on Commercial Street across from the MBTA Orange Line station long-term to the stadium developers.
“We’ll make an offer [on the smaller properties] by the end of April; then we’ll see if they’re in a negotiating mode,’’ said Alex Bok, the Boston lawyer and president of the Boston Baseball Field of Dreams LLC, which has been seeking a Boston-area ballpark for several years. “We’re looking to get a deal done to purchase their land by next March or April.’’
If all goes according to plan, workers could break ground by this time next year, Bok said.
Although negotiations will not truly begin until offers are on the table, lurking in the background is the possibility that the Malden Redevelopment Authority may take the properties by eminent domain, said George McLaughlin, an attorney representing L&L Services and Spadafora’s Auto Parts.
“I have a wait-and-see attitude,’’ said McLaughlin. “These are businesses that have been here a long time. If [the developers] want to step up to the plate and pay us fair-market money, I think a deal could be struck, as long as we get the whole pie.’’
At issue will be the compensation levels not just for the land, but for the costs associated with relocating the businesses. If Bok low-balls the owners and the redevelopment authority steps in to take the properties by eminent domain, McLaughlin said he has no qualms about taking the matter to court.
“Give me a jury trial any day of the week; that’s my ‘field of dreams,’ that’s my ballpark,’’ McLaughlin said.
At the Tuesday meeting, Bok said he plans to make above-market offers on the property and has consulted an appraiser to help formulate his bids.
For the redevelopment authority to exercise its right to take the property, it would first have to designate the area an urban renewal zone, which would trigger a public hearing process, said Deborah Burke, the authority’s assistant executive director. Then the state Department of Housing and Community Development would have to sign off on the renewal plan, she said.
“The hope is that any acquisitions that are made are done privately between Bok’s team and the three private parcel owners,’’ Burke said.
In the meantime, the Baseball Field of Dreams group has grown to include roughly 20 consultants, architects, and planners who are working to hammer out the details that accompany the $50 million stadium. Before the group can complete a deal with National Grid, a two-month, $85,000 study by a baseball economics consultant will help the utility understand the intricacies of the baseball business.
“They’re a big institution,’’ Bok said of the utility. “They’re a company headquartered in London. It will take time to get a transaction done with them.’’
The stadium team has roughly a year to draw up detailed architectural plans, complete environmental and traffic studies, and apply for zoning and permitting changes. The zoning and permitting process will eventually spark a round of public hearings on the stadium.
The National Grid site is 10 feet narrower than previously believed, forcing the field to be shifted slightly north, said Mark J. Rosenhein, project manager for the Chelsea architectural firm that is collaborating on the plans.
A large gas pipe that runs beneath the property would have to be relocated, although a brick pumping station owned by National Grid will remain, he said.
Rosenhein said that once the large pieces of the park are locked in, planners can shift focus to the details. Because the Malden River once flowed at the site, planners said a possible theme could incorporate elements of the river’s history, and of Malden’s past.
“We’ll have failed if you come to the park and not learn something about the history of Malden,’’ Rosenhein said.
Matt Byrne can be reached at mbyrne.globe@gmail.com.
© Copyright 2012 Globe Newspaper Company.