Petco Park in downtown San Diego's East Village is the home of the Padres, built around the historic Western Metal Supply Co. building, a century-old brick warehouse folded directly into the left-field corner. The building's rooftop seats and windows look right down the third-base line, making it one of the most recognizable design features in modern ballpark architecture. Warm coastal weather and open concourses give the park a relaxed, indoor-outdoor feel year-round. It anchors a ballpark district that transformed a once-industrial stretch of downtown San Diego into one of the city's most vibrant neighborhoods.
Petco Park opened on April 8, 2004, with the Padres beating the San Francisco Giants in ten innings in the ballpark's first game. Built in 1909, the Western Metal Supply building it now houses was declared a historic landmark decades before it became part of the stadium, and its facade has hosted Padres clinching celebrations, including a banner unveiled there for the 2005 NL West title. The park hosted the inaugural 2006 World Baseball Classic championship and the 2016 MLB All-Star Game, where Giancarlo Stanton put on a show winning the Home Run Derby by peppering all four levels of the warehouse building. It remains one of the sport's most celebrated modern ballparks for blending old brick with new baseball.
Source: RateGame editorial