The Atlanta Braves of Major League Baseball are planning to move to a new Spring Training stadium in Sarasota County, Florida, for the 2019 season. Their lease at Champion Stadium expires at the end of the 2018 season. The ballpark will be located in North Port, Florida in the southern part of Sarasota County, 35 miles south of Sarasota, Florida.
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History
Planning
Since 2015, the Atlanta Braves have been looking for a new Spring Training home. The Braves, who have held spring training at Disney's ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex near Orlando, Florida since 1997, have sought a new spring home in Florida to get closer to other teams' facilities.
In April 2016, the Braves and Sarasota County officials announced they were in formal negotiations. The Braves and Sarasota County began discussing a 100- to 150-acre site in the West Villages master-planned community in North Port.
Braves Choose North Port
In January 2017, the Braves and Sarasota County announced that they had entered formal negotiations. Plans for the project show a $100 million complex on about 70 acres. Six weeks after the Braves entered exclusive negotiations with Sarasota County, Fla., about a new spring-training facility, the parties reached agreement on the key terms of a proposed deal. The term sheet describes a $75.4 million facility to be built in the city of North Port and funded by Sarasota County, the state of Florida, North Port, the Braves and a private developer.
City and County Approval
On February 28, 2017 the planned deal for a new Atlanta Braves spring training stadium received its first approval. The initial agreement, known as a term sheet, outlines some of the basic finance, construction and operating commitments for baseball stadium. The Sarasota County Commission voted 4-1 to approve the terms, but only after commissioners raised serious questions about naming rights for the would-be stadium and public access to its numerous baseball and multi-use fields. Although other commissioners seemed to support her concerns, no amendments were made to the terms, which now still include that the team is to retain revenues from naming the stadium. Ultimately, commissioners agreed, there is more negotiating to be done and time to refine public access issues in the series of agreements due before the board in coming months.
On May 9, 2017 the Sarasota County Commission unanimously endorsed the plan to revise the distribution of the county's tourist development tax, collected on overnight stays at hotel rooms and short-term rentals. The county plans to borrow about $22 million for the project and pay it back using a portion of the tourist tax funds, now specifically designated for the new Braves complex and the Baltimore Orioles' Ed Smith Stadium in Sarasota, without raising the tax itself.
The mechanism behind the change is perhaps best understood by imagining the 5 percent tax as five pennies levied on every dollar spent on hotel stays or short-term rentals. Each of those "pennies" are divided and distributed to fund certain projects and the tax raises about $20 million a year. By shifting the assignments of those "pennies," the county will now dedicate about 15 percent of the annual collections -- estimated at $3.3 million -- to pay back borrowing for both the Braves and Ed Smith stadiums, plus capital improvement agreements for each.
On May 23, 2017 the Sarasota County Commission voted unanimously to approve an operating agreement that spells out the terms and conditions of a new facility for the Braves and a non-relocation agreement that requires the team to hold spring training in the complex for 30 years. The 48-page operating agreement sets a targeted completion date of Jan. 15, 2019, for construction of the facility, which is to be built in the Sarasota County city of North Port.
In June 2017, the West Villages' submitted the final grant application for $20 million in state stadium funding necessary to complete the $75 million to $80 million proposed public-private financing deal. Also, North Port city leaders endorsed a licensing agreement with the Braves that allows for regular public use of the complex outside of baseball games. This satisfied concerns that commissioners have raised over the past few months.
On July 25, 2017 the North Port City Commission voted 3-2 to pay $4.7 million of sales tax money to help fund the spring training complex. Mayor Linda Yates and Commissioner Debbie McDowell both opposed approving the inter-local agreement. Commissioner Chris Hanks proved the swing vote on the motion to approve funding that was made by Vice Mayor Vanessa Carusone and seconded by Commissioner Jill Luke.
On September 1, 2017 it was announced that the Florida Department of Economic Opportunity had conditionally approved $20 million that rounded out funding for the project. On September 12, 2017 the Sarasota County commissioners unanimously approved the agreements.
Commissioners also approved an interlocal agreement that outlines rights and responsibilities between the county and the West Villages Improvement District. The West Villages Improvement District will be responsible for the design and construction of the training facility. Upon completion, ownership will be transferred to the county. On September 19, 2017, the plan received its final public approval from the North Port City Commission.
Construction
By September 2017, crews had started preparatory studies and surveys of the site. Officials plan to host a formal groundbreaking with local leaders and team executives in mid-October. On September 1, 2017, the Braves announced Mike Dunn as the new Vice President of Florida Operations. Dunn will oversee development of the new spring-training complex.
Design
That Braves plans include a stadium with 6,500 fixed seats and 1,500 berm seats, team clubhouse, training facilities, a half-dozen practice baseball fields, six multi-use fields and space for the team's sports medicine academy. The complex is envisioned to become the heart of a planned "town center" commercial and residential district that will create opportunities for the college and nearby medical practices to partner with the team and its affiliates.
The stadium itself would sit on the north end of the tract, just south of the site of a planned new elementary and middle school campus. A public plaza area would line West Villages Parkway and could be used as a special event space when the team it not in town. Practice fields and multi-use fields would cover the southern and eastern portions of the 70 to 75 acres. Those multi-use fields could both be used as grass parking to expand capacity during spring training and as public fields for the new schools or new tournaments. The team's sports medicine, fitness and physical therapy academy also will have a new home on the site, which officials hope to integrate with programs at the nearby college campus and with area physicians.
The outfield dimensions would mirror those of SunTrust Park, the Braves' new home in Cobb County in the Atlanta metropolitan area.
Source of the article : Wikipedia
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