Dickey–Stephens Park
Dickey–Stephens Park is a baseball park in North Little Rock, Arkansas, United States. The ballpark is primarily used for baseball and serves as the home for the Arkansas Travelers of the Double-A Central. The capacity of the ballpark is 7,200 which includes 5,800 fixed seats capacity and 1,500 on the berms. It opened in 2007 as a replacement for Ray Winder Field in Little Rock, Arkansas. The ballpark is named after four local Arkansas brothers: Baseball Hall of Famer Bill Dickey, former Major League Baseball catcher George Dickey, and businessmen Jackson T. Stephens and W. R. Stephens.
Wikipage redirect
Central Arkansas
Ray Winder Field
Roundtop Filling Station
Simmons Bank Arena
Timeline of Little Rock, Arkansas
2010 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team2012 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team2014 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team2015 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team2015 Memphis Tigers baseball team2016 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team2017 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team2017 Little Rock Trojans baseball team2018_Arkansas_Razorbacks_baseball_team2019_Arkansas_Razorbacks_baseball_team2019 Grambling State Tigers baseball team2020 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team2020 Little Rock Trojans baseball teamArkansasArkansas Highway 365Arkansas TravelersBill_DickeyDelores BrumfieldDickey-Stephens ParkDouble-A CentralJackson T. StephensList of Double-A Central stadiumsList of Double-A baseball stadiumsList of Minor League Baseball leagues and teamsList of Texas League stadiumsList of U.S. baseball stadiums by capacityList of music venuesList of professional sports teams in the United States and CanadaList of sports venues named after individualsList of stadiums in North AmericaLittle_Rock,_ArkansasMetro StreetcarNorth_Little_Rock,_ArkansasPat Hays
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
ballpark
primaryTopic
Dickey–Stephens Park
Dickey–Stephens Park is a baseball park in North Little Rock, Arkansas, United States. The ballpark is primarily used for baseball and serves as the home for the Arkansas Travelers of the Double-A Central. The capacity of the ballpark is 7,200 which includes 5,800 fixed seats capacity and 1,500 on the berms. It opened in 2007 as a replacement for Ray Winder Field in Little Rock, Arkansas. The ballpark is named after four local Arkansas brothers: Baseball Hall of Famer Bill Dickey, former Major League Baseball catcher George Dickey, and businessmen Jackson T. Stephens and W. R. Stephens.
has abstract
Dickey–Stephens Park is a base ...... . Stephens and W. R. Stephens.
@en
architect
building start date
November 30, 2005
cost ($)
location
opening date
2007-04-12
operator
seating capacity
Link from a Wikipage to an external page
Wikipage page ID
13,723,131
page length (characters) of wiki page
Wikipage revision ID
1,008,017,008
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
architect
broke ground
2005-11-30
construction cost
@en
dimensions
Center Field –
@en
Left Center –
@en
Left field –
@en
Right Center –
@en
Right field –
@en
general contractor
Hensel Phelps/East-Harding
@en
image size
Location
North Little Rock, AR 72114
@en
logo image
opened
2007-04-12
operator
seating capacity
Baseball: 7,200
@en
services engineer
Smith Seckman Reid Inc.
@en
stadium name
Dickey–Stephens Park
@en
structural engineer
Jaster-Quintanilla & Associates
@en
tenants
Arkansas Travelers
@en
wikiPageUsesTemplate
subject
point
34.755215 -92.272582
comment
Dickey–Stephens Park is a base ...... . Stephens and W. R. Stephens.
@en
label
Dickey–Stephens Park
@en
lat
3.4755215e+1
long
-9.2272582e+1
wasDerivedFrom
homepage
isPrimaryTopicOf
name
Dickey–Stephens Park
@en