search
Ask ACHR NEWS AI
cart
facebook twitter instagram linkedin youtube
  • Sign In
  • Subscribe
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
  • NEWS
  • TECHNOLOGY
    • Heating & Boilers
    • Cooling & Chillers
    • Pumps & Flow Controls
  • SECTORS
    • Commercial
    • Health Care
    • Data Center
    • Educational Facilities
  • DESIGN | CONSTRUCTION
  • OTHER TOPICS
    • High-Performance Buildings & Automation
    • Ventilation and IAQ
    • Commissioning
    • HVAC Retrofits
  • TODAY’S BOILER
    • Today’s Boiler Archives
    • Today’s Boiler Digital Edition
  • MORE
    • Case Studies
    • Podcasts
    • Videos
    • Directory
    • Webinars
    • ES NEWS Store
    • White Papers
  • SIGN UP
  • Back to The NEWS
Engineered Systems NEWSHVAC Design/Construction ProcessCommissioningCase in Point

Baseball bas: system, fan-shaped roof fortify fan count

July 30, 2002
The weather was cold and miserable on the Milwaukee Brewers' opening day, April 6, 2001. However, 42,400 fans easily forgot about that while sitting in comfort beneath the roof of the new Miller Park, watching the Brewers beat the Cincinnati Reds.

A quality experience within the stadium was a key reason the Brewers drew 2.8 million fans during 2001 - 74% more than in the previous season. Faced with competing in a small major league market, the Brewers regard the climate-controlled stadium as critical to their efforts to raise the revenue necessary to field a winning team.

Miller Park's signature is its fan-shaped convertible roof - the only one of its kind in the United States. The $400 million ballpark also offers numerous amenities, such as luxury suites, 30 concession stands, a fine-dining restaurant and bar, as well as grills and assorted meeting rooms.

Scott Jenkins, the Brewers' vice president of stadium operations, oversaw the design and construction of the park. He now supervises the daily challenges involved in keeping fans comfortable despite the widely variable weather in Milwaukee. Jenkins' 28-member staff includes a five-person O&M team under contract from Johnson Controls (Milwaukee).

Johnson Controls participated in the stadium project from design through construction and commissioning. The company's Metasys(r) bas controls hvac for the stadium. Along with advanced lighting controls, it helped Jenkins bring in first-year utility costs 20% below an original estimate based on benchmarking of other new sports stadiums - that despite a spike in natural gas prices that lasted through the winter of 2000-2001.

Delivering a winner

Miller Park's 74 luxury boxes are an essential source of revenue for the Brewers. To meet suite holders' comfort needs, each suite's space conditions are controlled individually through the bas. The same control system also regulates the temperature beneath the roof.

"Because utility expense is one of our largest line items, it's something that has our attention. Our energy costs at Miller Park are four times higher than in the old stadium, so it's critically important that we operate efficiently," Jenkins noted.

"In 2001, we had a cold spring. We actually had to heat the building for the first couple of games in June," he stated. The operations staff aims to ensure fan comfort without turning on the heat prematurely and thus wasting energy. "We spend about $1,000 an hour to heat the bowl, so it's very important to make wise decisions on when to turn things on," Jenkins said.

To help make good decisions, the operations staff monitors various weather sites on the Internet. "One of the beauties of the bas is the ability to monitor what the discharge temperatures are, what the return temperatures are, and what bowl space temperatures are," adds Jenkins. "Because of that, we have been able to provide a very comfortable environment, irrespective of what's going on outside. For baseball fans in our climate, that is a tremendous asset."

First-year utility costs were 20% below an original estimate based on benchmarking of other new sports stadiums - despite a spike in natural gas prices.

Fans for the fans

Heat for the seating bowl comes from 18 indirect-gas-fired Mammoth (Chaska, MN) heaters delivering a combined 68,200 MBtuh, and from eight Trane (La Crosse, WI) built-up AHUs with 11 Trane supply fans that deliver 1.1 million cfm.

The Bryant (Indianapolis) gas heaters, located on the terrace and field levels, discharge through ductwork and diffusers on those levels and on the loge and terrace levels. The AHUs, fed by hot water from the stadium's four gas-fired boilers (total 33,600 MBtuh) are located on the service level behind the field-level seats. Fans force air into the seating bowl through slots cut into the concrete stands.

During cold weather games to be played under the roof, stadium personnel activate the heaters at a predetermined hour before game time - early enough to ensure fan comfort. Sensors in the gas-fired heating units monitor return air temperature; the bas then modulates the burner flames to maintain the desired temperature.

The air stays cooler on the playing field and in the outfield sections of seats, where outside air enters along the track beam at the base of the roof and through joints in the outfield wall which, like the roof, can be opened and closed. Natural convection occurs as newly introduced warm air rises and cooler infiltrating air settles.

During the Brewers' 81-game home season, the roof was closed for rain or cold during 30 games. In about half those cases, the heat was on. "We had days when it was 30 degrees outside, and windy - not at all baseball weather," Jenkins said. "But when you came in here space temperatures were 65 degrees F to 68 degrees."ES

Share This Story

Looking for a reprint of this article?
From high-res PDFs to custom plaques, order your copy today!

 

Recommended Content

JOIN TODAY
To unlock your recommendations.

Already have an account? Sign In

  • HVAC-enrollment

    The Trades Are Back: HVACR Programs See Nearly 30% Enrollment Spike

    A new wave of future technicians is entering the pipeline.  
    Training and Education
    By: Matt Jachman
  • 2025 Top 40 Under 40

    2025 Top 40 Under 40 HVACR Professionals List

    The 11th annual Top 40 Under 40 list highlights those...
    HVAC Residential Market
    By: Hannah Belloli-Oster
  • LG Ductless Mini-Split Systems

    The 9 Types of Heat Pumps

    As the U.S. moves toward electrification, heat pumps are...
    Air Source Heat Pumps
    By: Joanna R. Turpin

More Videos

Today's Boiler

Spring 2026 Issue

Today's Boiler - Spring 2026 Cover

Read More from Today's Boiler

Case in Point Logo

Smarter Hydronic Design for Data Centers - Free Webinar - January 22, 2026

Related Articles

  • Retrofit for Bank’s Bas System Earns Simple Interest

    See More
  • Cummins Engine puts Bas System to the Test

    See More
  • July 7, 2006: Digital Realty Trust Installs BAS System Across Its Properties

    See More

Related Products

See More Products
  • fanfelaysdvd.jpg

    Understanding Fan Relays and Multiple Speed Motors

  • Manual Q.jpg

    Manual Q - Low Pressure, Low Velocity Duct System Design

  • Manual LLH Cover_Final.jpg

    Manual LLH - 2019 (HVAC System Design for Low Load Homes)

See More Products

Related Directories

  • ZOO Fans

    Destratification fans for open ceilings and drop ceilings, HVLS fans, Garage transfer fans. ZOO Fans save energy and increase comfort for efficiency and performance.
  • Twin City Fan & Blower

    Commercial and industrial fans and blowers, plenum and plug fans, power roof ventilators, pressure blowers, radial tip fans. Industry leading designer and manufacturer of centrifugal fans and blowers, axial fans and power roof ventilators.
  • Universal Fan & Blower

    Centrifugal and axial FRP composite corrosion resistant industrial and commercial fans.
×

Sign Up. Stay Informed.

The #1 trusted source for the HVACR industry since 1926

SUBSCRIBE
  • RESOURCES
    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
    • Advisory Board
    • Classifieds
    • Submit a Letter
    • Directories
    • Store
  • ACCOUNT CENTER
    • Create an Account
    • Start a Subscription
    • Manage My Account
    • Sign Up for Newsletters
    • Visit Customer Service
    • Update Preferences
  • SERVICES
    • Marketing Services
    • Reprints
    • Market Research
    • List Rental
    • Survey/Respondent Access
  • STAY CONNECTED
    • LinkedIn
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • X (Twitter)
  • PRIVACY
    • PRIVACY POLICY
    • TERMS & CONDITIONS
    • DO NOT SELL MY PERSONAL INFORMATION
    • PRIVACY REQUEST
    • ACCESSIBILITY

Copyright ©2026. All Rights Reserved BNP Media, Inc. and BNP Media II, LLC.

Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing