Inside Fort Lauderdale Stadium | |
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| Full name | Fort Lauderdale Municipal Stadium |
|---|---|
| Address | 1401 NW 55th Street Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33309 |
| Coordinates | 26°11′44″N80°9′40″W / 26.19556°N 80.16111°W /26.19556; -80.16111 |
| Owner | City of Fort Lauderdale |
| Capacity | 8,340[1] (7,800 in 1962[2]) |
| Field size | Left - 332 ft. Center - 401 ft. Right - 320 ft. |
| Surface | Grass |
| Construction | |
| Opened | 1962 (1962) |
| Demolished | June 15, 2019[citation needed] |
| Construction cost | $800,000[2] |
| Tenants | |
| New York Yankees (AL) (spring training) 1962–1995 Fort Lauderdale Yankees (FSL) 1962–1992 Fort Lauderdale Red Sox (FSL) 1993 Baltimore Orioles (AL) (spring training) 1996–2009 Federal League Semi-Pro Baseball 1996–2010 Fort Lauderdale Strikers (training) 2010–2016 | |
Fort Lauderdale Stadium was abaseball stadium located inFort Lauderdale, Florida, next toLockhart Stadium which was built for soccer and outdoors events.
The stadium was demolished in June 2019 as part of the construction ofInter Miami CF Stadium forInter Miami CF.[3]
TheNew York Yankees announced in March 1961 they would move theirspring training location from St. Petersburg, Florida, to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where a new stadium would be built for the team at an estimated cost of $500,000 with 4,000 covered seats and 4,000 bleacher seats.[4]
The Yankees trained at the stadium between 1962 and 1995.
TheFort Lauderdale Yankees of the minor leagueFlorida State League played home games in the stadium from 1962 through 1992. TheFort Lauderdale Red Sox played home games there in 1993, after an unsuccessful attempt to move from Winter Haven to Fort Myers (they ended up the following year in Sarasota).
TheBaltimore Orioles held spring training at the stadium from 1996 to 2009.[5]
Fort Lauderdale Stadium was last leased toTraffic Sports USA (owners of theFort Lauderdale Strikers) in June 2011.
It was demolished a few months ago