It wasn't truley ever explored - an engineering firm did do a VR mockup of a ETFE Roof


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Which inspired me to do this totally awesome photoshop:

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Uhhh way too high? Like has the building been smoking cannabis? ( I kid)

The field is already sunken relative to street level so what do you mean by "too high"?


Even when the roof is open, it's nice that sun comes in and you can see the sky, but it doesn't feel like an outdoor ball park because is so big and the walls are so high around the whole stadium.

Look at what T-Mobile Field or Minute Maid Park when the roof is open compared to Skydome when the roof is open.
 
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Even when the roof is open, it's nice that sun comes in and you can see the sky, but it doesn't feel like an outdoor ball park because is so big and the walls are so high around the whole stadium.

Look at what T-Mobile Field or Minute Maid Park when the roof is open compared to Skydome when the roof is open.

Did a quick chatGPT prompt because this isn't data that is readily available. For Rogers Centre the peak of the dome is 86 m above field level. For T-Mobile Park it is 66 m above field level. For Daikin park it's 73 m above field level. For Globe Life Field it's 84 m.


So we are talking about a maximum difference of 20 m, or ~25% shorter than Rogers Centre. Keeping in mind that it was the first of it's kind and engineers likely took more precautions in the design this doesn't seem like that big of a difference. Possibly the biggest difference being the windows that these parks feature allowing natural light in and views of the city out. Though, again, we need to keep in mind that Rogers Centre was a "first of it's kind"
 
Took me two seconds:


And the other stadiums?

Also height of the peak of the dome is a rather useless metric since it has little impact on the in game experience, what is more important is the height of the structural walls, and (if the complaint is about sunlight penetration into the building) the light permeability of the exterior walls.

From an external street level, you really only notice the height of the exterior walls. The only time the height of the dome comes into play is in cityscape photos.
 
Did a quick chatGPT prompt because this isn't data that is readily available. For Rogers Centre the peak of the dome is 86 m above field level. For T-Mobile Park it is 66 m above field level. For Daikin park it's 73 m above field level. For Globe Life Field it's 84 m.


So we are talking about a maximum difference of 20 m, or ~25% shorter than Rogers Centre. Keeping in mind that it was the first of it's kind and engineers likely took more precautions in the design this doesn't seem like that big of a difference. Possibly the biggest difference being the windows that these parks feature allowing natural light in and views of the city out. Though, again, we need to keep in mind that Rogers Centre was a "first of it's kind"


A few things:

25% is a big difference, but that's not what really makes the difference. It's the non peak areas. Look how low the stands are in left Field at T-Mobile Field and Daikin Park are. That's what gives in the real open air and true baseball park feel.

Also, the fact Skydome is older and constructed first has nothing to do how it should be evaluated today. It would like they were still playing at Exhibition Stadium and saying, "well...it's a piece of crap stadium but we'll let it slide because he was built earlier."

You don't need to look up stats, just google them, look at them and see for yourself. Maybe to your eye it won't be a big deal, but it makes a huge difference to how I view the stadiums.
 
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These Jays can only be good for Downtown Toronto. The SkyDome looked beautiful stacked to the rafters and Front Street turned into a party as fans streamed out. I'd love it if renewed interest in the Jays acts as a springboard for improvements to the stadium's exterior spaces and surrounding neighbourhood.
Front Street has never really received the civic attention it deserves—at least not along this stretch. The section between Union and Spadina, in particular, feels overdue for a thoughtful reimagining.
 

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