Doggett Ford Park
Address | 5115 Interstate 10 South Beaumont, Texas, 77705 United States |
---|---|
Coordinates | 30°0′35.6″N 94°10′51.2″W / 30.009889°N 94.180889°W |
Owner | Jefferson County, Texas |
Operator | OVG360 |
Capacity | Arena: 9,737 Pavilion: 14,000 |
Construction | |
Opened | 2003 |
Construction cost | $75 million[1] |
Architect | Long Architects, Inc. |
General contractor | Allco Construction LLC. |
Website | |
Venue Website |
Ford Park is a 221-acre multi-purpose entertainment complex consisting of an arena, exhibit hall, amphitheater, midway, and 12 youth baseball fields located on I-10 South in Beaumont, Texas. The complex opened in 2003. It is owned by Jefferson County, Texas and operated by OVG360, a division of the Oak View Group. It is the home of the South Texas State Fair.
In 2020, Jefferson County began negotiations to sell Ford Park to Renaissance Development Group, which would add a hotel and a horse-racing track to the complex.[2] The deal fell through in 2022 after Renaissance failed to put additional earnest money towards the $22 million sale price.[3]
The Southeast Texas Ford Dealers have held the naming rights to the complex since 2003,[4] a deal which will expire at the end of 2022.[5]
Facilities
- Ford Arena seats 9,737 people. The arena hosts concerts, rodeos, circuses, motorsports, ice shows and many other special events. It was also the former home to several professional teams including the Oxford City FC of Texas (formerly the Texas Strikers) of the Major Arena Soccer League, the Southeast Texas Mavericks ABA franchise, Beaumont Drillers of the NIFL, and the Texas Wildcatters of the ECHL, and the Beaumont Panthers of The Basketball League.[6]
- Ford Exhibit Hall is a multi-purpose hall for exhibits, trade shows, and more. It has 83,000 feet (25,000 m) of space. The hall includes a 48,000 sq ft dedicated exhibit floor, an 11,000 sq ft lobby/pre-convention space, 8 meeting rooms, 6 loading bays, concession stands, and restrooms.
- Ford Fields are 12 youth softball/baseball fields. The infields are all-weather synthetic turf. Each field has covered seating with protective netting. Also included are 1,000 onsite parking spots, concession stands, and restrooms.
- Ford Midway is a 9-acre (36,000 m2) midway for fairs, carnivals, and other large outdoor events. The midway includes two free-span livestock show barns.
- Ford Pavilion is an outdoor amphitheater, seats 14,000 people. The pavilion includes 2 star dressing rooms, 2 supporting act dressing rooms, 3 production offices, 7 loading bays, a catering/crew room, parking, restrooms, and concessions.[7]
See also
- Beaumont Civic Center
- Fair Park Coliseum
- Ford Arena
- List of contemporary amphitheatres
- Montagne Center
References
- ^ Dan Wallach (October 4, 2016). "Ford Park to get new manager, county decides". Beaumont Enterprise. Hearst Newspapers II, LLC. Retrieved October 19, 2016.
The park cost $75 million to build, with $42 million in outstanding debt. Final payment is supposed to be made by 2025.
- ^ Kersey, Rachel (2022-01-18). "Ford Park sale gets hard deadline". Beaumont Enterprise. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
- ^ "Jefferson County commissioners unanimously vote to void sale of Ford Park". 12newsnow.com. March 29, 2022. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
- ^ Park, Ford. "Ford Park Entertainment Complex Renews Naming Rights | Ford Park". www.fordpark.com. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
- ^ KFDM/FOX4 (2022-04-01). "Ford Park naming rights to expire at the end of the year". KFDM. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Faye, Matt (2021-06-03). "Beaumont could finally have a pro team". Beaumont Enterprise. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
- ^ "Ford Park Entertainment Complex". Beaumont Convention and Visitors Bureau. Retrieved July 21, 2019.
External links
- Convention centers in Texas
- Indoor arenas in Texas
- Indoor ice hockey venues in the United States
- Sports venues in Beaumont, Texas
- Tourist attractions in Beaumont, Texas
- Lamar Cardinals and Lady Cardinals sports venues
- 2003 establishments in Texas
- Sports venues completed in 2003
- Fairgrounds in the United States
- Texas sports venue stubs