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Construction on new Atlanta Braves spring training facility moves forward despite rainy season

09 Aug 2018 4:54 PM | Anonymous
The Atlanta Braves spring training facility under construction calls for hundreds of workers, pounds of steel and cubic yards of concrete. A sneak peek reveals progress made and challenges ahead before the team can 'play ball.'

by: Grier Ferguson Staff Writer

Next spring will mean a fresh start for the Atlanta Braves.

But to get to fresh start, first the Braves, through a handful of partners and entities, are engaged in a massive and unique, one-time, $125 million made on the Gulf Coast manufacturing project: a brand new baseball stadium. 

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Project. Atlanta Braves spring training stadium and facility. 

Industry. Construction 

Key. Outlast weather dealys. 

The Major League baseball team is moving its spring training base from the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex in Orlando to West Villages, a master-planned community in North Port, a south Sarasota County city. With the move, the Braves will become the 10th Major League team, in what's called the Grapefruit League, to hold spring training on the west coast of Florida, from Lakeland through Fort Myers. Unlike most other teams, this stadium is the rare one to be made from scratch. 

Lori Sax. Braves Vice President of Florida Operations Mike Dunn, Tandem Construction Senior Vice President Brian Leaver and Fawley Bryant Architecture Project Manager Kirk Bauer look at plans for the Braves facility.

Braves Vice President of Florida Operations Mike Dunn says as other teams relocate from Central Florida, the North Port location will give them an edge — less time traveling. “Here we’re closer to the competition,” Dunn says. “Plus it’s a beautiful area.”

The Braves aim to play their first game in North Port in March 2019. But to do that, construction on the team’s new complex will have to be finished. That means the project team will have to keep plowing ahead — and keep dodging raindrops.

By the Numbers
  • 325 subcontractors are on site working in all areas of the complex.
  • 1,200 tons of steel has been erected for the stadium.
  • 12,360 cubic yards of concrete have been poured for the stadium.
  • The heaviest tilt-wall installed at the stadium was 69.5 tons.

After an October 2017 groundbreaking, foundation work started in December. Now about 40% of the project is complete, says Fawley Bryant Architecture Project Manager Kirk Bauer.

Getting to that point has meant some six-day work weeks and even, at times, seven-day weeks for some members of the team. Bauer says the project boils down to creating an entire 80-acre campus from a blank slate.

Courtesy. A rendering of the new Atlanta Braves spring training stadium under construction in North Port.

In addition to the Braves, partners contributing to the $125 million price tag include Mattamy Homes and the West Villages Improvement District. Florida, North Port and Sarasota County are also funding parts of the project. 

Dunn says the facility, with practice fields, an observation tower and a clubhouse, will serve as a baseball-manufacturing complex for the team. “Every component of the Atlanta Braves will be produced here,” he says.

Lori Sax. The inside of the stadium under construction.

For fans, meanwhile, the stadium has a 360-degree concourse walkway so all elements of the game are visible, Bauer says. The facility includes 6,200 fixed seats and 1,000 berm seats.

The stadium will also have a grassy knoll and an outfield patio and bar area. “We want the experience for the fan to be overwhelming,” says Dunn. The goal? Dunn says it’s to get the fan to say, “Oh my gosh, there’s so much to see and do.”

What’s the biggest manufacturing challenge you’ve had to overcome?

Summer storms present some signficant challenges at the Braves spring training construction site in North Port. “The biggest problem we’ve had lately is the rain,” says Fawley Bryant Architecture Project Manager Kirk Bauer. To make up for it, he says, “a lot of people have been working overtime.”

Gray skies frequently threaten rain, and when lightning is involved, that means workers must stop and retreat until it has passed. Braves Vice President of Florida Operations Mike Dunn says, “We understand we’re at the mercy of Mother Nature.”

In an internal report detailing construction progress and events during mid-July, officials write that lightning occurs daily around 2:30 p.m. and holds up work activities for up to two-and-a-half hours.

Weather or not, the overall plan remains the same: fans in seats, players on the field and bats swinging in March 2019.

A plaza on the campus will be open regularly to the public and fields will be available for use, too. “It’s more about bringing the community to this site,” Bauer says. “It’s not just a ballpark.”

To build the complex, the team is using a large local workforce.

Tandem Construction Senior Vice President Brian Leaver says that includes companies that have done good work in the past with the general contractor. “We’re working with partners we know,” he says, including Fawley Bryant and several subcontractors. “That’s why they’re here. We know they can perform.”

“It’s more about bringing the community to this site. It’s not just a ballpark.” — Kirk Bauer, project manager, Fawley Bryant Architecture

Part of what makes the project interesting, Leaver says, is the variety of materials, including clay, rock and sand. “It’s a lot of fun,” he says. “You don’t get to build Major League fields or stadiums very often.”

For Bauer, some of the excitement surrounding the new stadium has to do with tradition. When construction is done, it will become a place where traditions are born, he says, like children going to their first Atlanta Braves baseball game. “This will be the start of them being Braves fans.”


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