Principal Park

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Principal Park

Location Des Moines, Iowa
Opened April 16, 1992
Owner City of Des Moines
Surface Grass
Construction cost $12 million USD
Architect HOK Sport + Venue + Event
Former names
Sec Taylor Stadium (1992-2004)
Tenants
Iowa Cubs (PCL)
Capacity
12,000
Dimensions
Left field - 335 ft (102 m)
Center field - 400 ft (122 m)
Right field - 335 ft (102 m)

Principal Park, formerly Sec Taylor Stadium, is a minor league baseball stadium located in Des Moines, Iowa. It is the home field of the Pacific Coast League's Iowa Cubs.

Principal Park is located at the confluence of the Des Moines River and the Raccoon River in downtown Des Moines. The stadium seats 12,000 fans and has 45 luxury suites, 12 of which are in a building in left field that also houses the Cub Club restaurant. The Iowa State Capitol building is visible from beyond the center field fence, while some seats also provide views of the Des Moines skyline.

The first ballpark at this site was built as Pioneer Memorial Stadium in 1947. It was renamed Sec Taylor Stadium in honor of the longtime Des Moines Register sports editor on September 2, 1959.[1] The park served as home of the Des Moines Bruins of the Class A Western League (1947-1958)[2] and the Des Moines Demons of the Class B Three-I League (1959-1961).[3] It became the home of the Iowa Cubs (originally the Iowa Oaks of the American Association) in 1969.

By the late 1980s the original stadium was becoming run down, and was starting to develop a seedy reputation as the wooden seats and bleachers were splintering and unpainted. After Des Moines voters approved a bond issue to rebuild Sec Taylor Stadium in August 1990, most of the original stadium was demolished after the 1991 season.[1] The present facility, complete with sky boxes, plastic seats, metal bleachers and a family picnic area, was dedicated on April 16, 1992.[4] During part of the 1993 season the stadium was submerged by the Great Flood of 1993, but the team still went on to win the American Association championship. The Triple-A All-Star Game was held here in 1997. In 2004, Chicago Cubs pitchers Mark Prior and Kerry Wood -- both former I-Cubs players -- pitched rehabilitation starts in Des Moines and attracted sellout crowds in the process. Wood made two rehab starts at Principal Park in June 2005 and one start on May 12, 2006, which attracted a stadium-record 13,830 fans. That record was broken on July 4, 2006, when 14,169 fans watched an I-Cubs game against the New Orleans Zephyrs and post-game fireworks show.[5]

Sec Taylor Field at Principal Park, during a May 28, 2006, game against the Nashville Sounds
Sec Taylor Field at Principal Park, during a May 28, 2006, game against the Nashville Sounds

On August 5, 2004, Sec Taylor Stadium was renamed Principal Park after the Principal Financial Group purchased the naming rights to the facility. The playing field is still known as Sec Taylor Field.[6] The $2.5 million deal covered part of a $6.8 million renovation project that took place during the 2005-2006 off-season. The project included the addition of over 1,000 new seats in the right field grandstand, replacement of all other seats, construction of new right field bleachers, installation of a new scoreboard and video board, replacement of the stadium field lighting system, and other structural changes.[4]

Principal Park hosted its first Iowa High School Athletic Association state baseball tournament in 2005 and is scheduled to host the tournament through 2008.[7]

  1. ^ a b Iowa Cubs. Iowa Cubs: Ballpark. Retrieved on March 11, 2007.
  2. ^ BallparkDigest.com. League Histories: Western League. Retrieved on March 11, 2007.
  3. ^ BallparkDigest.com. Three-I League. Retrieved on March 11, 2007.
  4. ^ a b Iowa Cubs. Iowa Cubs: Ballpark. Retrieved on March 11, 2007.
  5. ^ Logue, Andrew. "A record 14,169 see I-Cubs win", The Des Moines Register, 2006-07-05, p. 1C.
  6. ^ Shuppy, Annie. "Sec Taylor becomes Principal Park", The Des Moines Register, 2004-08-06, p. 3B.
  7. ^ Iowa Cubs (press release). "High school state tourney here through 2008", 2006-02-21.


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