Electrical construction

San Francisco Giants Player Development Center Gets Revamped with New Construction

The project took four years to complete.   November 11, 2022


By FacilitiesNet Staff


One of the most anticipated construction projects in baseball has been the completion of the San Francisco Giants Player Development Center at Papago Park in Phoenix. The four year project brought together some big names in construction, including Okland Contruction, Frontier Golf and Rosendin. 

Rosendin provided full-service electrical contracting and design-assist services on a new 52,000 square-foot clubhouse, a new 15,000 square-foot maintenance building and a new 30,000 square-foot building that houses the league’s first indoor half field, as well as batting and pitching lanes. In Arizona’s desert environment, indoor training is a huge benefit for year-round conditioning. 

“We were thrilled to work on this unique project for the San Francisco Giants, City of Phoenix and City of Scottsdale because it is the first of its kind facility that provides climate controlled training space for elite baseball players to develop their skills,” says Tony DeVito, project manager at Rosendin. “Our teams have decades of experience building and renovating spaces for sports teams so we worked closely with the Okland Construction, Frontier Golf and Populous Architects to ensure every area would be well lit and safe without radiating extra heat.” 

Rosendin also completed electrical and lighting upgrades on the clubhouse which includes state of the art sections including over half a dozen locker rooms, weight room, classrooms, dining area and office space. Populous Architects designed the space to reflect the desert of Papago Park using natural materials, reclaimed wood and specialized lighting installation, while providing suitable exteriors that complimented the natural landscape of Papago Park. 

The $3.42 million service contract was broken into four projects starting in 2019 and included electrical upgrades, SES repair and underground electrical work. The timeline was directly impacted by COVID-19 and at one time the project was halted to reduce costs while the baseball team dealt with pandemic restrictions. 

 

 

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