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Posted on: December 4, 2025, 02:49h. 

Last updated on: December 4, 2025, 02:50h.

A miniature model of the 33,000-seat ballpark the former Oakland Athletics are building on the Las Vegas Strip is now on display to the public in a preview and premium ticket sales office.

A 1:200 scale model of the Las Vegas A’s stadium on display at the Ballpark Experience includes a roof that lifts upward on poles — seemingly more than 1,000 feet above the upper decks. However, that’s only to provide an unobstructed view into the model. Though early concepts in 2023 included a retractable roof, the real thing will be topped by a fixed structure. (Image: The Athletics)

The 1:200 scale model, created by Las Vegas-based ModelWorks AJT, is the centerpiece of a 12,000 square-foot Ballpark Experience Center that opened this week at UnCommons, a mixed use residential, retail dining and event complex in Southwest Las Vegas.

The real stadium, which will resemble the Sydney Opera House, features a roof with five overlapping shells. Nicknamed the “spherical armadillo,” it’s designed to create shade and climate control while allowing filtered natural light into the stadium. (Image: Negativ)

The center also includes the Immersive Cube, a 270-degree digital projection room with 26.5 million pixels simulating views of the 33,000-seat ballpark from its pitcher’s mound.

Other exhibits include a clubhouse-themed area housing replicas of the four World Series trophies the team won in Oakland (1972, 1973, 1974 and 1989 — though the Philadelphia A’s also won World Series in 1910, 1911, 1913, 1929 and 1930).

Finally, there’s a life-size elephant sculpture — a nod to the team mascot born in 1902, after New York Giants manager John McGraw mocked the Philadelphia Athletics by saying they had a “white elephant on their hands.”

Expect Hardball Pitches

Here is the fake elephant in the room. The real one is whether the $1.75-$2 billion A’s stadium will actually get built. (Image: The Athletics.)

The Ballpark Experience Center is open by appointment only. This — and the fact that it’s about a 15-minute drive from the Strip — reveal its primary purpose: to sell season tickets and premium memberships to wealthy Las Vegas residents in a luxury car showroom-like environment.

One also can’t help assume a secondary purpose — to sell the public at large on the notion that the $1.75-$2 billion stadium, promised in time for the 2028 season, will actually get built.

Though $380 million in public funding is secured, formal contracts for the remaining $1.6 billion are not  — though Nevada officials have repeatedly stated that team owner John Fisher and his family have the equity to cover $1.1 billion and the rest will come from a $300 million loan from US Bank and Goldman Sachs, as well as investor equity that has yet to materialize.

Fans interested in an appointment to tour the Ballpark Experience can visit athletics.com/vegas.



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