A $5 million Minnesota Twins-funded renovation at Target Field has given the ballpark a new look, more places to play and enhanced security.
For the sixth time in 10 seasons of baseball at Target Field, the Twins used the offseason to redo the batter's eye — the center field backdrop against which batters try to get a read on the movement of pitches often hurtling toward them at 90-plus mph.
At first there was a line of evergreens, then paint and later aluminum; this year's batter's eye will be a field of 6,000 Sea Green Juniper plants.
More noticeable to fans will be Gate 34, one of the ballpark's two major entrances facing downtown.
Gate 34 added a permanent metal canopy and additional entry checkpoints, including two lanes for users of Clear, the biometric screening system often used at airports for an enrollment fee.
Flexibility and increased security drove the design, said Matt Hoy, the team's senior vice president of operations. When Target Field opened in 2010, security practices weren't what they are now.
Adjacent to the new Clear entrances are dedicated lanes for fans with disabilities and season-ticket holders, as well as checkpoints for everyone else.
The enhanced gate ate up some of the plaza, which features statues of Twins' greats Kirby Puckett and Harmon Killebrew.