New Brunswick

Moncton opens first accessible baseball park

Moncton has a brand new ball field, and this one has a few special features.

Pitchers don't throw from a mound in park designed for players with physical and cognitive difficulties

Moncton opened its first accessible baseball diamond Monday. (Radio-Canada)

Moncton has a brand new ball field, and this one has a few special features.

The city's first accessible baseball field opened Monday.

Charline Godin, part of the "Field of Dreams" committee that spearheaded the project, said there's a few key differences between an accessible ball field and others.

"We have an infield that's all turf, so there's no hills," Godin said. "It's basically flat. The bases, everything is at one level."

"The openings to get into the dugouts are wider. The dugouts themselves are a lot larger so wheelchairs can go in and out easily."

'I’m hoping that we kind of made it fully accessible when it comes to these kids,' says Charline Godin. (Radio-Canada)

The field at the CN Sportsplex also includes wheelchair-accessible bleachers.

Godin said the group has been helping children with physical and cognitive disabilities play ball for eight years. That hands-on experience, plus input from parents, gave the group guidelines on what the park should be like.

"I'm hoping that we kind of made it fully accessible when it comes to these kids," said Godin.

Nadine Melanson-LeBlanc of the City of Moncton's Leisure Department said the funding was a partnership between the city, Field of Dreams and the province.

The entire infield of the new park is turf, and there is no pitching mound. (Radio-Canada)

"It came in and around the ballpark of $500,000 to renovate an existing field to all of the elements," said Melanson-LeBlanc.

"We decided to divide that amount in three."

For the Field of Dream's share, the commmittee reached its funding goal with donations from the President's Choice Children's Charity and the Blue Jays' Jays Care.

"We are truly thankful that those two organizations stepped up," said Godin.

"We were speechless."

With files from Information Morning Moncton