Historic Section Of Pimlico Not Safe For Preakness Seating

BALTIMORE (AP/WJZ) — Nearly 6,700 grandstand seats at Baltimore's Pimlico Race Course are not safe, an engineering firm has determined, meaning roughly 18 percent of the historic track's seating capacity will be cordoned-off when it hosts one of America's premier horse races next month.

The Northern Grandstand at the race track has deteriorated and will be closed for the Preakness States next month. This week, the Maryland Jockey Club wrapped up a study saying Pimlico Race Course has reached the end of its useful life by closing almost 6,700 seats.

Some city lawmakers assert that the looming closure of the northern grandstand adjacent to the clubhouse — the oldest section of seating with a capacity of 6,670 — illustrates how the Canada-based development company that owns and operates the track has systematically routed renovation cash away from the host of the Preakness Stakes. The storied race is the second-leg of the Triple Crown.

BALTIMORE - MAY 19: Seats are illuminated by the morning sun prior to the 137th running of the Preakness Stakes at Pimlico Race Course on May 19, 2012 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)
BALTIMORE, MD - MAY 18: A man walks through rows of empty seats during a training session days prior to the 141st running of the Preakness Stakes at Pimlico Race Course on on May 18, 2016 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)
BALTIMORE, MD - MAY 19: Justify #7 ridden by jockey Mike Smith and the field come out of the starting gate during the 143rd running of the Preakness Stakes at Pimlico Race Course on May 19, 2018 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Todd Olszewski/Getty Images)

"This announcement underscores the core issue of renovation funding being intentionally steered away from Pimlico to help manufacture a crisis," said state Sen. Bill Ferguson, a Baltimore Democrat.

Pimlico owner The Stronach Group says its hands are tied: An engineering firm has determined that the northern grandstand with those 6,670 seats can't sustain that level of load bearing weight any longer. The announcement about the closure of the 125-year-old section of seating was made by the Maryland Jockey Club, a state sporting organization that called the closure a "difficult decision."

Acting Mayor Jack Young Takes Up Fight To Block Preakness, Pimlico Move

It's the latest chapter in a meandering saga pitting Stronach against Baltimore authorities desperately trying to hold onto the middle jewel of the Triple Crown of thoroughbred racing. Thousands of racing fans will flock to Pimlico on May 18 for the 144th running of the Preakness.

There's been no shortage of recent drama ratcheting up the dispute.

Most recently, a bill failed to pass in Maryland that would have allowed The Stronach Group to use state bonds for improvements at Laurel Park and Bowie Training Center, if it redeveloped the Pimlico Race Course. Baltimore's House delegation opposed the move over concern about the company moving the Preakness out of the city where it was first run in 1873.

And last month, a lawsuit filed by Baltimore's mayor, the City Council and three residents claimed Stronach was "openly planning to violate Maryland law by moving the Preakness to a different racetrack despite the absence of any disaster or emergency, except for the disaster that they are in the process of creating."

Under state law, the Preakness Stakes can be moved to another track in Maryland "only as a result of a disaster or emergency." Yet Stronach has made it abundantly clear it would like to move the race out of the city. Over the years, it has spent much of its state-subsidized renovation funds on boosting its newer track in Laurel, not the increasingly dilapidated Pimlico.

The announcement about safety concerns about Pimlico's rickety grandstands is hardly out of the blue. A report issued late last year by the Maryland Stadium Authority recommended demolishing all existing structures at the historic track, asserting that the rundown condition of the aging Baltimore track presents challenges threatening the "continued existence and the success of the Preakness Stakes." It called for the track to be torn down and rebuilt at a cost of $424 million.

Baltimore Sues To Block Move Of Preakness Stakes From Pimlico

According to the track's website, the section of grandstands to be shut down represents some 47% of the roughly 14,000 seats in Pimlico's clubhouse, main grandstand, old grandstand and sports palace and make up nearly 18% of the overall seating capacity for some 38,000 patrons. Another 82,000 people can cheer for their racing favorite in the standing room and infield areas.

The closure will be in effect for the entire Pimlico spring meeting, which includes the Preakness May 18. Tickets sold in the affected section for the Preakness can be traded in at face value for similar seating elsewhere.

The Stronarch Group said in a statement:

"Mother nature-- through water and the freezing of such-- has lead to the deterioration and degradation of the building as it does with all buildings, particularly of this open-air type. Most open-air sports facilities have a useful life of three to four decades,"

This comes as the city is fighting to keep the Preakness at Pimlico while the owners say they want to move it to Laurel.

Acting Baltimore Mayor Jack Young said the city is committed to keeping the race in Charm City.

"I'm committed to Pimlico. I'm committed to the Preakness staying in Baltimore. I think everybody can get a win-win for exactly what they want as long as it stays in Baltimore and they fix up Pimlico," Young said.

Park Heights natives want the Preakness to stay.

"Pimlico will not be anything. The Preakness will no longer exist if they move the Preakness. It's just that simple," said Francesca Brooks, Park Heights resident.

"The local merchants and entrepreneurs, we make that day and I'm one of them so it's imperative they keep the racetrack on Preakness day here. It's like our Super Bowl. It's been here for a long time," said Artie Gentry, another Park Heights resident.

"People think money can change but it will not be the Preakness anymore if it leaves Pimlico Race Track," said Leonard Webb, another Park Heights resident.

Ownership said it is too early to tell how much money they'll lose to fix the Grandstand.

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