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Originally Posted by Busy Bee
I would saw my leg off I'm so confident the Sox are not going to stop being the Chicago White Sox anytime soon (read: never). That said, just to play devils advocate...
Unlike the Cubs which have a much larger regional geographic following - all the way from Iowa to halfway downstate and a good chunk of Indiana - the Sox core fanbase is much more concentrated, not much beyond the metro area and specifically the SW city and the S/SW burbs with the western burbs probably evenly split. So a hypothetical stadium should cater to that game attending fanbase. I'd love to see a new stadium built pretty much on site or site adjacent but honestly if they proposed an awesome complex around Ford City that also included finally getting that Orange Line extension, that wouldn't be half bad.
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I would rather the Sox stay on 35th. The fact that Guaranteed Rate is a incredibly mediocre place to watch baseball and is surrounded by a wasteland of parking is largely Reinsdorf's doing. Not sure whether any new stadium development would be any better. Jerry's motivations have not changed one iota over time, and a new home for the Sox would likely reflect that.
The state might be able to make a few bucks selling the land the park is on to developers. Bridgeport has become a place for Chinatown overflow, and this could be sold as Bridgeport East.
Ford City is a great idea. Always thought that area would be ripe for a rebuild with an Orange Line extension; doubly so if the N-S portion of the Lime Line were to ever get built. Same goes for some that power center garbage on the west side of Cicero in Burbank. The one thing Ford City does not have is easy access from an interstate, which might be a sticking point. It's about 4.5 miles from I-55, but would mean slogging through airport traffic on Cicero.
I'm not sure moving the Sox to Soldier Field would work. Using Google, Guaranteed Rate and Soldier Field are both right around 17-18 acres. But I don't see how a baseball stadium could fit in SF's narrow footprint, unless you wanted to recreate the Dodgers' experience in the LA Coliseum in the 50's.
Trying to re-jigger the area to fit baseball would likely mean moving things like the Gold Star Families' Memorial. That'd be a tough sell. But, to bring up a sore spot for many, does One Central make any more sense with 81 MLB games a year than with 8 or 9 NFL games?
Guaranteed Rate, park and parking included, is around 85 acres, which rules out the West Side near United Center. Bronzeville Lakefront, is around 95 acres, if the truck marshalling yards are counted. The 78 is 62 acres. South Works is probably too out of the way.
Looking at the suburbs, if, as you say, much of the Sox fandom is concentrated in the S/SW/W burbs, the old mental health center site in Tinley Park looks like a natural. The property is right off I-80, only a few miles from where it intersects with I-355 to the west and I-57 to the east. The Metra-Rock Island station on 80th Ave. is within walking distance as well. There are 275 acres to build on, more than three Guaranteed Rate complexes. Plenty of room for Reinsdorf to build a "ballpark village".
The state still owns the site. So, consider that Illinois' contribution to the stadium effort. The Village of Tinley Park has been fighting with the state just maintain the property. The town has plans to one day use some of the site for parks and convert the rest to residential, but they had similar plans a few years ago and were more than willing to toss those plans in a dumpster when the possibility of a racino came up. They'd likely do it again for the Sox.