tiger stadium demolition

Dan Austin/HistoricDetroit.org An excavator scoops up crumbs of history on Sept. 11, 2008. With popular restaurants near by (Slows, Gold Cash Gold, The Sugar House and Mercury Burger & Bar), it may be worth a drive by if … To see the Tiger Stadium site is interesting from a historical perspective, however, there is very little there other than a fence/gate and a field.

Aerial, Photos of Tiger Stadium Demolition, Last Chance to see Tiger Stadium, Detroit Tigers Major League Baseball , Michigan and Trumbull, 2121 Trumbull, ballpark, The Tigers, All-Star Game, Navin Field, Frank Navin, John Fetzer, Briggs Stadium, Walter Briggs, Ernie Harwell, Detroit Lions National Football League, 125-foot flagpole, On Dec. 16, 2009, the left field scoreboard from Tiger Stadium was installed at the baseball field at Wayne State University.

Tiger Stadium Demolition DETROIT, MI - JULY 22: A view of the center field bleachers and flag pole of Tiger Stadium, the former home of the Detroit Tigers and Detroit Lions, during partial demolition performed by a joint venture between the Farrow Group, Inc. Demolition and the MCM Management Corp. on July 22, 2008 in Detroit, Michigan.

Title: 'Reclamation' Size: Image - 10x10, Paper - 11x14 This image was taken with a Holga 120 medium format film camera in September 2007 at the old Tiger Stadium in Detroit, Michigan. The Old Tiger Stadium Conservancy, a group opposed to the demolition of Tiger Stadium, has until June 1 to raise $369,000 to try to save part of the historic site. As of December 2012, the site remains empty and unused and the point of the stadium's demolition unclear.

To see the Tiger Stadium site is interesting from a historical perspective, however, there is very little there other than a fence/gate and a field. With popular restaurants near by (Slows, Gold Cash Gold, The Sugar House and Mercury Burger & Bar), it may be worth a drive by if …

Regardless, LSU's Tiger Stadium is widely know in college football. Aerial, Photos of Tiger Stadium Demolition, Last Chance to see Tiger Stadium, Detroit Tigers Major League Baseball , Michigan and Trumbull, 2121 Trumbull, ballpark, The Tigers, All-Star Game, Navin Field, Frank Navin, John Fetzer, Briggs Stadium, Walter Briggs, Ernie Harwell, Detroit Lions National Football League, 125-foot flagpole,

Tiger Stadium Demolition DETROIT, MI - AUGUST 05: A view of the home team bullpen of Tiger Stadium, the former home of the Detroit Tigers and Detroit Lions, during partial demolition performed by a joint venture between the Farrow Group, Inc. Demolition and the MCM Management Corp. on August 5, 2008 in Detroit, Michigan. The demolition company co-opted the Tiger Stadium sign to hang its banner in 2008. The stadium's demolition was completed on September 21, 2009. Granted, I'm not saying that LSU's Tiger Stadium is more known than Detroit's Tiger Stadium (after all, the Detroit Tigers are in a professional baseball league of only 30 teams, while LSU is only one of 119 teams in NCAA Division I-A football). The Tiger Stadium that exists in the popular consciousness was born in 1938, when then-owner Walter Briggs Sr. expanded the existing park into a … It was shot with 120 medium format slide film and was cross-processed.