Rogers Centre in downtown Toronto is the retractable-roof home of the Blue Jays, sitting directly beneath the CN Tower in one of baseball's most distinctive skylines. It opened as SkyDome with the world's first fully retractable motorized roof, an 11,000-tonne engineering feat that let the stadium host baseball, football, and concerts rain or shine. The Rogers Centre remains Canada's flagship ballpark and the only MLB stadium outside the United States, drawing national crowds for every Blue Jays homestand. Its size and multipurpose design still make it a go-to venue for concerts, trade shows, and other major Toronto events.
The stadium opened as SkyDome in June 1989 and was renamed Rogers Centre in 2005 after Rogers Communications bought it. It delivered the high point of Blue Jays history almost immediately, hosting the team's back-to-back World Series titles in 1992 and 1993 — Toronto became the first team outside the U.S. to win the World Series, and Joe Carter's Game 6 walk-off homer in 1993 remains one of the sport's iconic clips. Those two championships made it, for a stretch, the epicenter of Canadian sports celebration. It has since undergone renovations to modernize seating and sightlines while keeping its landmark retractable roof intact.
Source: RateGame editorial