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== Similar and related places == {{refimprove|section|date=May 2025}} === Major League Baseball === ==== Former ballparks ==== [[File:Griffith Stadium right field wall.jpg|thumb|right|The right-field wall at [[Griffith Stadium]] in the early 1920s]] * [[Griffith Stadium]] in Washington, D.C., the longtime home of the [[Washington Senators (1901β1960)|Washington Senators]], had its own version of the Green Monster in right field. * The [[Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome]], which was demolished in 2014, was the home ballpark of the [[Minnesota Twins]] and the [[Minnesota Golden Gophers baseball]] program. A {{convert|23|ft|m|adj=mid|-high}} advertising-covered [[Tarpaulin|tarp]] hung over the fold-away football seating in right field and was derisively referred to as the "[[Hefty]] Bag" or "Baggie" for its black [[bin bag|garbage bag]]-like appearance. As hitting the exposed folded seats above it was considered a home run and the tarp provided a [[trampoline]]-like bounce to assure a double, it was an attractive target for left-handed [[power hitter]]s. * The [[Kingdome]] in [[Seattle]], [[Washington (state)|Washington]], had a high right field wall that was dubbed "The Walla-Walla" after [[Walla Walla, Washington]]. * [[Hard Rock Stadium|Pro Player Stadium]], the former home of the [[Miami Marlins|Florida Marlins]], featured a smaller "Teal Monster" in left field from 1992, the team's debut season, until 2009, when the display was replaced by ad hoardings for the remaining 2010 and 2011 seasons before their move to [[Marlins Park]]. The board started out as manual but eventually was converted to a digital [[Text display#Eggcrate displays|eggcrate display]] with remote control.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://miamiherald.typepad.com/fish_bytes/2010/04/teal-monster-put-to-rest-at-sun-life-stadium.html|title=Teal Monster put to rest at Sun Life Stadium|last=Navarro|first=Manny|date=9 April 2010|work=[[Miami Herald]]|access-date=18 August 2017}}</ref> ==== Current ballparks ==== * [[Daikin Park]] (previously known as Minute Maid Park), home of the [[Houston Astros]], has a wall inspired by the Green Monster in left field, atop which is mounted a train reminiscent of the operating days of the adjacent Union Station. The wall is {{convert|25|ft|m}} deeper and {{convert|1|ft|m}} higher than the Green Monster, but in front of it is a section of stands called the [[Crawford Boxes]], which are only {{convert|19|ft|m}} high and are {{convert|5|ft|m}} deeper. * [[Oracle Park]], home of the [[San Francisco Giants]], has a {{convert|24|ft|m|adj=mid|-high}} right field wall in honor of [[Willie Mays]]; the height in feet matches his retired uniform number. * [[PNC Park]], home of the [[Pittsburgh Pirates]], has a {{convert|21|ft|m|adj=mid|-high}} right field wall, paying homage to the Pirates' [[National Baseball Hall of Fame|Hall of Fame]] [[right fielder]] [[Roberto Clemente]], who wore uniform number 21. * [[Progressive Field]], home of the [[Cleveland Guardians]], has a {{convert|19|ft|m|adj=mid|-high}} left field wall, nicknamed the "little green monster". === Minor League Baseball === [[File:Durham Bulls Athletic Park (April 2023) 4.jpg|thumb|right|View of the Blue Monster at [[Durham Bulls Athletic Park]] in 2023]] * [[Durham Bulls Athletic Park]], home of the [[Durham Bulls]], [[Triple-A (baseball)|Triple-A]] affiliate of the [[Tampa Bay Rays]], has a {{convert|32|ft|m|adj=on}} wall in left field named the "Blue Monster". * [[Fluor Field at the West End]], home of the Red Sox [[High-A]] affiliate, the [[Greenville Drive]], has a "Greenville Monster" in left field. * [[Hadlock Field]], home of the Red Sox [[Double-A (baseball)|Double-A]] affiliate, the [[Portland Sea Dogs]], boasts a replica of the Green Monster, nicknamed the "[[Maine Monster]]". * [[McCormick Field]], home of the [[Asheville Tourists]], the High-A affiliate of the Houston Astros, has a {{convert|36|ft|m|adj=mid|-high}} right field wall. === Independent baseball === * [[Ogren Park at Allegiance Field]], home of the [[Missoula PaddleHeads]] of the independent [[Pioneer League (baseball)|Pioneer League]], has a {{convert|27|ft|m|adj=mid|-high}} in right field, located {{Convert | 287 | ft}} from home plate as measured along the foul line. The park has a similar wall that is {{Convert | 309 | ft}} from home plate, but not as tall. * [[WellSpan Park]], home of the [[York Revolution]] of the [[Atlantic League of Professional Baseball]], has "The Arch Nemesis" that is {{convert|6|in|cm}} taller than the Green Monster. === Collegiate baseball === [[File:Telus Field.jpg|thumb|right|View of [[RE/MAX Field]] in 2010 (when it was known as Telus Field) with its large center-field wall]] * [[Bush Field (Yale)|Bush Field]], home of the [[Yale Bulldogs baseball]] program and former ballpark of the Double-A [[New Hampshire Fisher Cats|New Haven Ravens]], features a {{convert|35|ft|m|adj=mid|-high}} green metal wall in center field, which not only features a manual scoreboard, but also displays balls, strikes and outs with colored lights, just like Fenway's Green Monster.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://unclebobsballparks17.tripod.com/yalefield/ |title = Yale Field |website=Uncle Bob's Ballparks}}</ref> * [[Hawkins Field]], home of the [[Vanderbilt Commodores baseball]] program, features a {{convert|35|ft|m|adj=on}} version of the Green Monster, with a scoreboard on top. * [[George C. Page Stadium]], home field for the [[Loyola Marymount Lions baseball]] program, features a "Blue Monster" in left field that is {{convert|37|ft|m}} tall. * [[RE/MAX Field]], home of the [[Edmonton Riverhawks]] of collegiate summer baseball, has a {{convert|34|ft|m|adj=mid|-high}} wall located {{convert|420|ft|m}} from home plate. === Elsewhere === * [[Fukuoka Dome]], home of the [[Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks]] of [[Nippon Professional Baseball]], has a {{convert|5.84|m|ft|adj=mid|-high}} "Green Monster" in the outfield. * [[JetBlue Park]] in [[Fort Myers, Florida]], current spring training home of the Red Sox, features a replica of the Green Monster. JetBlue's Green Monster even has Fenway Park's 1934-vintage, manually operated scoreboard installed in it. * The [[John F. Fitzgerald Expressway]], part of [[Interstate 93]] through downtown Boston, was for many years an elevated expressway held up with green girders, which was derided as "Boston's other Green Monster".<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-boston-globe-scheme-z/172536857/ |title=Scheme Z |first=Peter J. |last=Howe |newspaper=[[The Boston Globe]] |page=A17 |date=December 9, 1990 |accessdate=May 16, 2025 |via=newspapers.com}}</ref>
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