Entrance from south in 2024 | |
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| Address | 1790 Richards Road |
|---|---|
| Location | Bellevue, Washington,U.S. |
| Coordinates | 47°35′46″N122°09′47″W / 47.596°N 122.163°W /47.596; -122.163 |
| Elevation | 60 feet (18 m)AMSL |
| Owner | City of Bellevue |
| Operator | City of Bellevue |
| Capacity | 300+ |
| Field size | Left Field: 325 ft (99 m) Left-Center Field: 402 ft (123 m) Center Field: 395 ft (120 m) Right-Center Field: 402 ft (123 m) Right Field: 325 ft (99 m) |
| Acreage | 12.65 acres (5.1 ha) |
| Surface | FieldTurf (infield) Natural grass (outfield) |
| Scoreboard | Electronic |
| Tenants | |
| Seattle U. Redhawks (NCAADIWCC) (2010–present) | |
Bannerwood Park is abaseball park in thenorthwestUnited States, located inBellevue, Washington, a suburb east of Seattle. It is the home field ofSeattle University, a member of theNCAADivision IWest Coast Conference.[1] The venue features lighting, bleacher seating, concessions, and restrooms.[2]
On February 23, 2010,[3] Bannerwood Park hosted Seattle's first home game since returning to Division I; the Redhawks lost 21–7 toDivision IISaint Martin's ofLacey.[4]
In addition to Seattle U. home games, Bannerwood Park also hosts numerous high school baseball games, including theKingCo Conference 3A tournament.
There are three sets of bleachers at the park; behind home plate is the largest, seating 200 people. On the sides by the dugouts are smaller bleachers that seat fifty each.
The officialseating capacity of Bannerwood Park is 300, but there is abundant room to stand and watch or sit in your own folding chair down the foul lines into the outfield.