MLB Stadium

Great American Ball Park — Dimensions, Park Factors & Intelligence

Home of the Cincinnati Reds in Cincinnati, Ohio.

Overview

Great American Ball Park Overview

Cincinnati Reds
Home Team
Cincinnati, Ohio
Location
2003
Opened
42,319
Capacity
Grass
Surface
490 ft
Elevation
Open air
Roof
Eastern (ET)
Time Zone

Great American Ball Park is the home ballpark of the Cincinnati Reds, located in Cincinnati, Ohio. The stadium opened in 2003 and seats approximately 42,319 fans. It sits at an elevation of roughly 490 feet above sea level and operates in the Eastern (ET) time zone. The playing surface is grass. It is an open-air ballpark fully exposed to local weather. From a hitter's and pitcher's perspective, the outfield measures 328 feet down the left-field line, 379 feet to left-center, 404 feet to straightaway center, 370 feet to right-center, and 325 feet down the right-field line. Its deepest posted distance is center field at 404 feet, while the most reachable corner is right field at 325 feet. As one of the 30 active Major League Baseball ballparks, Great American Ball Park combines these fixed dimensions, its 490-foot elevation, and its open air configuration to shape how the ball carries, how pitchers attack the zone, and how run scoring plays out across a season. The Cincinnati Reds compete in the NL Central of the National League, and this venue serves as their fixed home environment for all home games on the schedule. Relative to a typical big-league outfield, the 404-foot center-field distance and 326-foot average corner here place Great American Ball Park on the more compact, hitter-accessible end of the league spectrum. The reference figures on this page are evergreen stadium facts rather than daily projections, and they anchor EdgeRanked's park-adjusted MLB projection, weather, and results coverage for this venue.

Dimensions

Official Outfield Dimensions

Posted official outfield distances (feet).

328
Left Field
379
Left-Center
404
Center Field
370
Right-Center
325
Right Field
FieldDistance
Left Field328 ft
Left-Center379 ft
Center Field404 ft
Right-Center370 ft
Right Field325 ft
EdgeRanked Park Intelligence

Proprietary Park Ratings

EdgeRanked's deterministic 0-100 outlook ratings derived from verified park geometry, elevation, and configuration. Higher favors the named environment; Pitcher Friendliness is the inverse.

Home Run Environment
64/100
Elevated
Run Scoring Environment
61/100
Average
Pitcher Friendliness
45/100
Average
Extra Base Hit Environment
55/100
Average
Weather Sensitivity
77/100
Elevated
Park Factors

Empirical Park Factors

Verified multi-season empirical park factors are not part of EdgeRanked's published dataset, so they are shown as Unavailable rather than estimated.

FactorValue
Home Run FactorUnavailable
Run FactorUnavailable
Singles FactorUnavailable
Doubles FactorUnavailable
Triples FactorUnavailable
Handedness

Handedness Analysis

Geometry-based read on how the park's dimensions play for each batter handedness.

Left-Handed Hitter Impact

With near-symmetrical corners (325 ft to right), left-handed hitters gain no pronounced pull-side edge; overall carry and weather drive their outcomes.

Right-Handed Hitter Impact

With near-symmetrical corners (328 ft to left), right-handed hitters gain no pronounced pull-side edge; overall carry and weather drive their outcomes.

Weather Impact

Weather & Environment

As an open-air ballpark at roughly 490 feet of elevation, Great American Ball Park is shaped by real weather. Warmer air and lower humidity let the ball carry farther, while cool, damp, or heavy marine air suppresses fly-ball distance. Wind direction matters most: a breeze blowing out turns fly balls into home runs, while an inbound wind knocks them down. Wind is a meaningful, regularly-felt factor here. These effects are evergreen tendencies; EdgeRanked layers live forecasts on top of them for game-day projections.

Notable Characteristics

Ballpark Profile

Great American Ball Park carries a distinct on-field character driven by its geometry, elevation, and exposure to the elements. The park stands at about 490 feet of elevation in Cincinnati, Ohio, a factor that influences how far well-struck balls travel and how much break pitchers can generate. The corners are close to symmetrical (328 feet to left, 325 feet to right), so neither batter handedness gains an obvious pull-side advantage from the foul lines. Center field plays a fairly standard 404 feet. As an open-air park, conditions here are shaped by wind, temperature, and humidity, so the same swing can produce different outcomes from a cool, heavy night to a warm, dry afternoon. On EdgeRanked's deterministic park-intelligence scale, Great American Ball Park clearly favors hitters and run scoring, grading 61/100 for run environment and 64/100 for home runs. Its extra-base-hit environment rates 55/100, reflecting how the gaps and 404-foot center field reward doubles and triples, while pitcher friendliness sits at 45/100. The natural-grass surface plays at a conventional infield speed, with hop and reaction times typical of a grass field. With a seating capacity of roughly 42,319, the park's scale and configuration also influence foul territory and the overall feel of at-bats for both hitters and pitchers. Located in Cincinnati, Ohio within the Eastern (ET) time zone, Great American Ball Park carries an EdgeRanked weather sensitivity rating of 77/100, a measure of how much day-to-day conditions can move its scoring environment relative to other Major League ballparks. Signature characteristics include: Strong home-run park; Short corners; River breezes. Taken together, these traits make Great American Ball Park a unique environment within Major League Baseball, and they feed directly into EdgeRanked's park-aware projection, weather, and results coverage for Cincinnati Reds games.

Related EdgeRanked Resources

Explore Cincinnati Reds Coverage