Take Me Out to the Environmentally-Friendly Ballgame!
New D.C. Ballpark. Courtesy of WashingtonNationals.comEditor's note: Red, Green and Blue will take a break this week, but that doesn't mean Ryan and Jimmy are! RG&B will return, though, in a new format that we really think you'll like…
That's right, sports fans. After a long, cold winter, the 2007 baseball season is just around the corner!
While many of you this time of year are watching the madness of 19 year-olds tossing balls at hoops, I'm spending my time examining Oakland A's box scores, listening to webcasts of Spring Training games, participating in Fantasy Baseball drafts (team name: Renewable Synergy), and, most importantly, keeping track of the latest efforts by Major League Baseball and its teams to "go green".
There's plenty of good eco-news coming from Major League front offices lately. Just last week, the San Francisco Giants announced that they're becoming the first team to install solar panels at their ballpark. (Our very own Senior Editorial Correspondent Jeff McIntire-Strasburg wrote about it at Treehugger, too.) Best of all, the Giants are installing the panels on the port walk by McCovey Cove, so every time Barry Bonds launches one of his signature "Splash Hit" home runs, the panels will be prominently displayed on Bay Area television and nationwide on highlight shows. If Barry himself really wants to help the cause, I'd suggest that he do his best to break Hank Aaron's home run record during a home game. If he did, the panels would become a big part of baseball history when the upper deck camera pans from home plate toward the water beyond the right field wall. Just make sure to pull it, Barry.
Other teams are showing some earth love, too. The Washington Nationals and Minnesota Twins are in a race to become the first team with a LEED Certified stadium. In seeking LEED recognition from the United States Green Building Council, the teams are planning to minimize and filter waste streams, design for energy efficiency, incorporate public transportation considerations into their planning, and take dozens of other eco-conscious steps.
The New York Yankees have hired the one of the same architectural firms as the Nationals (HOK) for the new Yankee Stadium project, though the Yankees haven't yet announced any plans to go green in the Bronx. They are the Evil Empire, so I'm not holding my breath. (Sorry, I'm still not over Game 3 of the 2001 playoffs. Where did Jeter come from!? Slide, Jeremy. Slide!)
There's also good news for those of us who choose to leave meat out of our plates: there's stuff for us to eat at the ballpark! Just a few years ago, we were stuck with peanuts and Crackerjacks at most stadiums. Now, you can get a veggie dog or veggie burger almost anywhere, and at the best venues, the selection is even much more exotic than that. When PETA ranked the top 10 veg-friendly ballparks last year, the Giants stole the show with such offerings as grilled vegetable kebabs, grilled veggie baguettes, and vegetarian sushi. My A's were ranked fourth, though I was disappointed when I walked into the Coliseum last April and discovered the Black Muslim Bakery no longer had their booth with lots of yummy vegan food behind home plate. The Yankees? Not on the list. They didn't even get an honorable mention. Figures. They must not have room for vegetables in their budget what with their $9 billion payroll and all.
For greeniac baseball fans, the hits just keep on coming. There are advanced recycling and waste reduction programs already in place at several stadiums, my forward-thinking Oakland A's became the first team to sell adult beverages in compostable, cornstarch-based cups, and Major League Baseball has formed a partnership with the Natural Resources Defense Council to help the league green its act.
I know there are lots of other green initiatives being implemented stadiums all across the country. What have you seen at your local ballpark? What changes would you like to see?
See you at the ballpark. Enjoy the season, everyone! (Yankees fans not included.)
Tags: Architecture, ballparks, baseball, compost, Green Building, Green News, LEED, Recreation, recycling, sports, stadiums, vegetarian
- Uncategorized


March 27th, 2007 at 2:47 pm
Nice update on the action.
One thing though: It's NATURAL Resources Defesense Council.
March 27th, 2007 at 3:12 pm
We've got that corrected — apologies!
_______________________________________
Jeff McIntire-Strasburg
Senior Editor
Green Options
jeff@greenoptions.com
March 27th, 2007 at 4:02 pm
I wish the Cards had thought about these things when they built the new Busch (although I do enjoy the veggie burgers they serve.)
I still love ‘em though.
Defending World Series Champs!
March 27th, 2007 at 10:32 pm
Thanks for the link. I’ve actually written a couple of posts about green stadiums and some of the challenges that they present for rating systems like LEED:
http://www.greenbuildingsnyc.com/?cat=50
These other initiatives your post mentions are obviously great. Fundamentally, though, the best sustainable stadium strategy is to leave existing stadiums intact. The Red Sox are doing it. The Cubs are doing it. Why do the Yankees and Cowboys need to spend over $1B for new digs? No matter how green they might be, new stadiums will still have a substantial environmental impact that could be mitigated if the teams just stayed in their existing buildings. (And I’m not just saying that as a Yankee fan who doesn’t want to see the Stadium razed).
March 27th, 2007 at 10:49 pm
You're a much bigger person than me, Stephen. After all the Yankee trash-talking I did in the post, you declined to escalate it. Good man.
And I agree with you on the new stadiums issue in general. But I also see how some of the teams really do need new stadiums to draw fans and remain competitive (financially and otherwise). It's a tough trade off for them and from an environmentalist fan's perspective. For teams like the Red Sox (and your Yankees), new stadiums are a luxury, not a necessity, because their classic parks are filled to capacity every night.
For the Nationals and my A's, it really is a necessity. If they have to build new stadiums, my hope is that they make them icons of sustainability. The Nationals and Twins appear to be doing their best. On the other hand, my A's are going to be destroying even more of the Bay Area's wetlands when they start building their new home in Fremont. I'm not sure what they can do to make up for that, but they'd better try.
May 19th, 2007 at 4:40 am
Ever watch just how many baseballs are used every game?
Sports can move one more step towards green with our new line of FSC-certified sports balls. First in the US! Our baseballs launch this Fall.
More FSC info on our blog: http://fairtradesports.com/?p=115
- Scott James
Fair Trade Sports
http://www.fairtradesports.com
Fair Trade Sports Balls with FSC Certification!
May 19th, 2007 at 9:29 pm
can wait to see what next season brings…
March 31st, 2008 at 2:16 am
[...] not as ambitious as some other efforts we’ve seen from major leagues sports franchises, but it’s a start… and [...]