place

Estadio Luis Rodríguez Olmo

American baseball venue stubsBaseball venues in Puerto RicoBuildings and structures in Arecibo, Puerto RicoCaribbean sports venue stubsPuerto Rican building and structure stubs
Puerto Rican sport stubs

Estadio Luis Rodríguez Olmo is a multi-use stadium in Arecibo, Puerto Rico. It is currently used mostly for baseball games and is the home of Lobos de Arecibo. The stadium holds 9,000 people.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Estadio Luis Rodríguez Olmo (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Estadio Luis Rodríguez Olmo
Calle Armando Vega Colón, Arecibo

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Estadio Luis Rodríguez OlmoContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 18.457823 ° E -66.722176 °
placeShow on map

Address

Calle Armando Vega Colón
00613 Arecibo (Tanamá)
Puerto Rico, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Share experience

Nearby Places

Gonzalo Marín 61
Gonzalo Marín 61

Gonzalo Marín 61 (also known as the Abreu Residence) is a historic building located in the historic and administrative center of Arecibo, Puerto Rico. It was added to the United States National Register of Historic Places on October 19, 1986. Although an exact date of construction cannot be determined, based on historic photographs of the area, it can be said that the structure already existed on this lot by 1860. The historic building is currently abandoned. The Abreu Residence is a two-story, masonry and wood, commercial and residential building on the south side of Gonzalo Marin Street, in the historic center of Arecibo. The base level is of stuccoed load-bearing masonry and the main, upped floor is of timber and clapboard construction. The composition consists of four bays, spaced evenly and symmetrically at both the ground and upper stories. At the commercial base level, two central rectangular entrance bays are flanked by smaller, square window openings. Each opening is articulated by heavy, planar, masonry surrounds. Bay number two contains original, wooden, double doors with glass transoms, but bay number 3 has been altered to house aluminum and glass commercial doors. A planar pilaster strip frames the east and west extremes of the ground-floor. A continuous base mold and a simple cornice delineate the lower and upper limits of the masonry base-story, respectively.Although there is no documentation as to the original appearance of the house, it can be assumed from the prototype that the facade remains true to the original form and that an original, ceramics tile roof was replaced by metallic sheets during the early twentieth century. Traces of the ceramic tile are visible from the interior, above the timber construction.