Baseball's cathedral: At 60, Dodger Stadium has never looked better (2024)

The tour starts at Section 1. At the top of Dodger Stadium. Where the mountainous backdrop, picturesque playing surface and 56,000 seats all come into view.

Before thousands of fans file into the ballpark every night, groups of about a dozen each walk the grounds on guided tours every afternoon.

They go from the top deck to the field-level seats. From the historic hallway that leads to the clubhouse, where World Series trophies and a century’s worth of awards adorn the walls, to the baseball diamond the Dodgers have called home for the last 60 years.

They don’t come for modern amenities. They don’t see many cutting-edge features. They aren’t dazzled by architectural advancements.

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This place offers something different. A portal to the past. A connection to the present.

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And, even after all this time, a sporting and cultural touchstone destined to last well into the future.

“It’s kind of like baseball’s cathedral,” longtime Dodgers third baseman Justin Turner said.

Indeed, while many venues could be called one of baseball’s spiritual homes, Dodger Stadium is near the top of the list.

And next week, it will be under the sport’s biggest spotlight once again.

For the first time since 1980, Dodger Stadium will host Major League Baseball’s All-Star Game. And though such big names as Aaron Judge, Shohei Ohtani and Mike Trout might headline, it’s the 60-year-old stadium that, as much as anything else, will take center stage.

“When you get deep down to it as a player,”Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw said, “I don’t think there’s anything better.”

Baseball's cathedral: At 60, Dodger Stadium has never looked better (2)

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In honor of Dodger Stadium turning 60 years old, we asked Janet Marie Smith, Dodger executive vice president of planning and development, to show us some of the lesser-known details about the stadium.

“It’s long overdue,” Turner added. “That energy and that buzz and that atmosphere that is created here, which has a lot to do with our fan base, makes it an exciting place to play.”

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It’s not just that Dodger Stadium has baseball’s largest seating capacity.

Or that it’s the majors’ third-oldest active venue, after only Wrigley Field and Fenway Park.

Or that, of MLB’s 30 current stadiums, few mimic its style, match its history or offer an equally distinct feel.

“Dodger Stadium sitting up there alone — sort of literally and figuratively — in this cavernous parkland surrounded by Chavez Ravine is just so unique and special,” said Janet Marie Smith, a longtime stadium architect who serves as the Dodgers’ executive vice president of planning and development.

“I’m sorry to keep using the word ‘unique,’” she added during a recent interview. “But it’s hard to think of a better word.”

More than a decade ago, Peter O’Malley found the sketch folded up in his father’s old files.

Now it hangs framed on a wall in his high-rise downtown L.A. office, a hand-drawn vision of Dodger Stadium that outdates the ballpark itself.

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The story of Walter O’Malley’s decision to move the Dodgers from Brooklyn to Los Angeles is nothing new.

A native New Yorker, Walter spent the better part of a decade trying to build a new home for the franchise in Brooklyn. When he couldn’t strike a land deal with the city, he considered relocation.

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Officials from Los Angeles courted him to move west. Then, during a helicopter ride in 1957, Walter flew over Chavez Ravine. Dreams of a grand new stadium began dancing in his head.

Roughly two years before Dodger Stadium opened in 1962, Walter and a team of stadium architects completed the now-framed sketch, detailing everything from the layout of the concrete beams to the arrangement of each level of seating to the palm trees and plant life dotting the perimeter.

In the corner, Walter’s handwriting lists the rough capacity for each of the stadium’s four decks.

“There was never any doubt in my dad’s mind how it would look,” said Peter, who was 24 years old when the stadium opened and still vividly remembers the years-long process during which it came to fruition. “Yes, he had people helping him. Great staff. But they knew what he wanted and what he didn’t want. It was a proud moment when it opened.”

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Baseball's cathedral: At 60, Dodger Stadium has never looked better (4)

Dodgers president Walter F. O’Malley, left, points out features of an under-construction Dodger Stadium to San Francisco Examiner sports editor Curly Grieve on Feb. 22, 1962.

(Dick Strobel / Associated Press)

It came at a seminal point in baseball history too.

From the mid-1950s to the early 1970s, new ballparks were popping up around the United States, first in such new major league markets as Milwaukee and Minnesota, then as more longtime franchises moved into new, modern venues in their home cities.

Most had similar characteristics: colossal concrete structures, often designed to accommodate a co-tenant from the NFL, and usually lacking much surrounding scenery or architectural charm.

Dodger Stadium was different. It had natural baseball sightlines in an almost perfectly symmetrical design. It was an urban park but was surrounded by a lush, hillside setting.

Baseball's cathedral: At 60, Dodger Stadium has never looked better (5)

A view of the parking lot outside Dodger Stadium during the first regular-season game played at the stadium on April 10, 1962.

(Los Angeles Times)

And while other stadiums of its era eventually went out of style, leading to a new generation of ballparks that have been built over the last quarter-century, Dodger Stadium has retained its allure.

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It has ascended to iconic status.

It has become, in a city forever changing around it, an everlasting landmark too beloved to be replaced.

“This is one of the few places in baseball that’s a baseball park, where there’s no quirky things,” said Dave Roberts, who spent 2002 to 2004 with the Dodgers as a player before becoming manager ahead of the 2016 season. “The bones of this ballpark, it’s still a baseball field. And that’s something that makes this just like Wrigley or Fenway, in that conversation.”

Peter O’Malley, who inherited ownership of the Dodgers when his father died in 1979 before selling the club to News Corp. in 1997, recalled how during his ownership, suggestions to explore building a new stadium downtown or in Century City never gained traction.

“Whatever tiny interest those might have had in the beginning, it just went down and down,” he said. “[Dodger Stadium] is gonna be there a long time.”

Not even his father, he believes, could have imagined the longevity the stadium has achieved.

“I’m not sure that occurred to him,” O’Malley said. “I think what did occur to him was he saw the setting, the possibility.”

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Baseball's cathedral: At 60, Dodger Stadium has never looked better (6)

An aerial view of Dodger Stadium, with downtown Los Angeles in the background.

(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

Sixty years later, Walter O’Malley’s vision lives on.

His ballpark, of course, has changed over the years.

The gas station in the center-field parking lot, part of a marketing deal that helped get the project financed, was removed long ago. New sections of field-level seating were added in what used to be foul territory. The outfield pavilions have been renovated and expanded. An entrance plaza in center field was opened last year.

But the midcentury architecture, simplistic seating design and indescribable ambiance of the place remain six decades later.

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“It’s just become more revered as time has gone on,” said Smith, who oversaw the most recent renovations, in which she was careful to accent and update the stadium’s traditional style, not overpower it with too many modern additions.

“The emotions and traditions at Dodger Stadium are just palpable,” she said. “I think it’s a testament to our club and our fan base that it’s got such a distinctive note, one that just literally vibrates throughout the park on a daily basis.”

That will be especially true Tuesday night, when the Midsummer Classic is held at Chavez Ravine for the first time since 1980, when Steve Garvey, Davey Lopes, Jerry Reuss, Bob Welch, Reggie Smith and Bill Russell (the Dodgers’ all-time leader for games played in the stadium) were on the National League’s team.

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Baseball's cathedral: At 60, Dodger Stadium has never looked better (8)

Fans walk by a statue of Jackie Robinson as they enter Dodger Stadium before a game against the Philadelphia Phillies on June 15, 2021.

(Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press)

“It’s just an incredibly historic venue,” said Matt Gangl, the lead director for Fox Sports television coverage of the event who will be tasked with capturing the atmosphere for millions of viewers.

“You need to pay homage to the fact that there’s been a lot of history there,” he added.

It’s why the ballpark has become more relevant with time, why its significance around baseball and the Southland has, over the years, continued to grow.

It isn’t baseball’s nicest facility. It lacks the flash and luxury of newer venues around the majors.

Yet it remains sentimental to longtime spectators and leaves first-time and longtime visitors alike in awe — starting every afternoon with the tour-goers who gaze at it from above, a panoramic view with six decades worth of memories.

“The experience of Dodger Stadium and the culture of our fans I think is just electric,” Smith said, before adding with a laugh: “I’d love to think it’s all about the architecture, but I know better than that.”

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Baseball's cathedral: At 60, Dodger Stadium has never looked better (2024)

FAQs

What is the most beautiful baseball stadium in the world? ›

Petco Park – San Diego Padres

There is a poignant, undeniable phrase that applies to the Padres' home park: the most aesthetically pleasing ballpark ever built. Much of the credit for this positively gorgeous exterior and interior belongs to renown architect Antoine Predock, who passed away in March 2024.

What is the coolest stadium in the MLB? ›

Throughout PNC Park's history, everyone in the Pirates organization has consistently referred to it as “the best ballpark in America” -- and they're not shy about it.

Has a baseball ever been hit out of Dodger Stadium? ›

On September 30, 2021, Fernando Tatís Jr. hit a ball out of the stadium off the top of the left field pavilion roof. Most recently, on July 21, 2024, Shohei Ohtani hit a ball 473 feet out over the right field pavilion into the center field plaza.

What is the most historic baseball stadium? ›

Fenway Park opened for the 1912 season and is the oldest in use. Wrigley Field opened for the 1914 season. Those two are far and away the oldest stadiums in MLB. Dodger Stadium (1962), Angel Stadium (1965, and has been renovated a couple of times), and Oakland Co...

What is the nicest stadium in America? ›

  1. Fenway Park. 17,505. Arenas & Stadiums Fenway / Kenmore. ...
  2. Madison Square Garden. 9,202. Arenas & Stadiums Chelsea. ...
  3. Wrigley Field. 9,970. Arenas & Stadiums Wrigleyville. ...
  4. Oracle Park. 7,165. Arenas & Stadiums South Beach. ...
  5. Crypto.com Arena. 3,503. Arenas & Stadiums Downtown. ...
  6. PNC Park. 6,176. ...
  7. Yankee Stadium. 4,492. ...
  8. AT&T Stadium. 4,027.

What stadium is the hardest to hit a homerun? ›

Fenway Park's short dimensions ultimately help batters, but it's not the most home-run-heavy stadium in the league. That honor goes to Coors Field.

Which MLB stadium has the best atmosphere? ›

The top 5 stadiums were:
  • Oriole Park at Camden Yards: 1st overall and top-rated facility.
  • PNC Park: 2nd overall, top-rated stadium for families, and top-rated fan experience.
  • AT&T Park: 3rd overall, 2nd for food, and top-rated hot dog.
  • Safeco Field: 4th overall.
  • Ewing M.

What is the smallest MLB stadium? ›

Tropicana Field is the smallest MLB stadium by seating capacity when obstructed-view rows in the uppermost sections are covered with tarps as they are for most Rays games. Tampa Bay Rays Ltd. M-E Engineers, Inc. Tropicana Field opened in 1990 and was originally known as the Florida Suncoast Dome.

What was the dodgers worst year? ›

1992 Los Angeles Dodgers season.

How deep is Dodgers Stadium? ›

Although the Dodgers have maintained that the distance to center field is 395 feet since 1980, it is still actually 400 feet to center, as has been the case since 1969. The two '395' signs erected in 1980 are to the left and right of dead center.

What is the oldest MLB stadium still in use today? ›

Fenway Park

Boston's professional baseball stadium is home to the infamous Green Monster. That's the nickname for the nearly 40-foot-high left-field wall in Fenway Park, the oldest major league ballpark still in use by a professional team. The Boston Red Sox have called Fenway home since it opened in 1912.

What is the oldest baseball team still playing? ›

Atlanta Braves, the oldest continually operating team in North American sports. Known as "Beaneaters" and other nicknames, as original nickname faded and became re-associated with Cincinnati (and later with the Boston Red Sox). Adopted name "Braves" in 1912. Moved to Milwaukee (1953) and to Atlanta (1966).

Which MLB team has the highest ticket prices? ›

1. Los Angeles Dodgers. The Los Angeles Dodgers have a dedicated fan base that lives in an area with a high cost of living. Even baseball tickets here are the most expensive in the league.

What is the most luxurious stadium in the world? ›

SoFi Stadium

What MLB park has the best view? ›

1. Wrigley Field (Cubs) Speaking of which, walking up the ramp on the north side of Chicago to see the ivy all along the outfield wall is the thing to see in all of baseball.

What is the most legendary stadium in the world? ›

What is the most famous stadium in the world? The Maracaná Stadium, located in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, is considered one of the most famous stadiums in the world. It has hosted two World Cup finals and has hosted numerous world-renowned sporting and musical events.

What is the biggest baseball stadium in the world? ›

Oakland Coliseum

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