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Rangers to Raise Ballpark Railings to 42 Inches
The Texas Rangers announced Tuesday that they are raising the railings located in front of all seating sections at Rangers Ballpark in Arlington to a height of 42 inches.

That represents an increase of a foot in some areas and a height eight inches higher at the leftfield location where on July 7 Shannon Stone toppled over a 34-inch railing and onto a concrete surface 20 feet below while reaching for a tossed ball. Stone, 39, died from his injuries within an hour.

In addition, the Rangers will add bright yellow signage at the base of all aisles and in front of upper-level seating sections warning fans to not “lean, sit on, or stand against rail,” according to ESPN Dallas reporter Richard Durrett. The Rangers will make scoreboard and public address announcements emphasizing this warning before games (Texas opens a seven-game home stand Friday), and security personnel will strictly enforce the policy among fans seated near railings.

The team removed a tarp installed to bridge the gap between the leftfield seating section and the visitors scoreboard through which Stone fell. No safety net will be incorporated into the Rangers’ safety changes, which emphasize railing height above all else. Engineering evaluations are under way as to how to best accomplish the adjustments, and an exact date of completion was not known as of this writing.

“The safety of our fans is our top priority,” said Rangers CEO and president Nolan Ryan in a statement Tuesday. “The initiatives we are announcing today for Rangers Ballpark in Arlington will help to ensure that we meet that priority.”

Select railing heights were raised in 1994, after a fan fell out of the Home Run Porch following the ballpark's debut game. However, a railing that remained at its original height failed to contain another fan who fell 30 feet from the stadium’s club level last July. Both survived.

Following a pair of unrelated non-fatal falls at Busch Stadium in St. Louis in 2009, a sports architect told AB that 42 inches may become the new standard for all stadium railing heights. Currently, the International Building Code requires a height of 42 inches in front of aisles, but only 26 inches in front of seating.

According to the ESPN Dallas report, the Rangers’ extra precaution pleases Josh Hamilton, the player who tossed a foul ball to Stone. “I think it’s smart,” Hamilton said. “It’s not going to hurt anything. It’s good to know that the organization really cares about the fans and the safety of the fans and is willing to make improvements even though they aren't necessary as far as safety standards.”
Posted At 9:30 AM • Comments (4)

It's too bad and a tragedy that a fan had to pay with his life before they decide to raise the hieght of the railings...just because the building code states it is only nessecary to have 42' railing by the aisles only...shouldn't deter them from seeing a potential safety issue with the 26' railings at the end of the seats. Especially if there is a 20' drop to concrete below the seating area!
Comment By Dennis Joseph At 7/20/2011 12:13 PM
Shouldn't an adult person be more responsible for his actions and not put the responsibility on the venue where the ?adult choose to spend his money and time. In other words, grow up folks!!
Comment By big momma At 7/20/2011 2:42 PM
Higher front railings in most stadiums would significantly obstruct the sightlines of the first few rows. Rail height vs acceptable views of the game has been the trade-off for the past 2 decades. Even so in hindisght it seems like an easy decision and acceptable compromise when the alternative is serious injury or tragic death.

Unfortunately the huge boom of new stadiums (1990-2009) is largely over, and so changing the building code requirement for NEW stadiums is like closing the barn door after the horse has escaped.

One more subtle point to raise: Is baseball the sport most likely to have this problem (fan reaching past railing to catch a game-ball) compared to football, hockey, basketball, or soccer? The NHL reacted by installing nets on the end zones. Perhaps this is a baseball-specific issue that should be addressed in all existing MLB and Minor League parks, rather than a revision to building codes affecting all assembly buildings. Who wants to watch a stage performance or orchestral concert looking through a 42' rail in a concert hall?

Another complication: ADA platforms are inherently a 'front-row' rail condition, so requiring tall rails to protect the (ambulatory) companion will inherently block sight lines from persons in wheel chairs.

Wow this is a sticky issue.

My suggestion would be to address baseball only, and make sure it applies to the existing facilities. Something like that will have to come from the League, there are to many jurisdictions to use the building codes to drive it.

How about we just outlaw the 7th inning stretch?
Comment By Sports Architect At 7/20/2011 5:31 PM
As a 5' 2' person who always seems to get stuck in the seat with a rail etc in the way (even at my children's youth baseball games)....this is a knee jerk reaction to a terrible accident. It will significantly decrease the value of the front row seating in baseball stadiums. Who wants to spend 3-4 hours repositioning themselves to be able to see a sporting event that they have paid a significant amount of money to enjoy.
I agree with the previous comment of being responsible for your actions and conscious of your surroundings. Not sure abut the sobriety of the people who have or have almost fallen either.....I know I have a beer or 2 at a MLB game but have been surrounded my people who have had way too much. I also think we are seeing more of it on the news recently because of the 1 incident. Not because it is actually happening more.
Comment By Nikki Parker At 7/21/2011 11:52 AM
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