As was the case in most cookie-cutter stadiums, foul territory was quite roomy.
It is one of the few "cookie-cutter" stadiums to still remain active, along with Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium and O.co Coliseum.
But let them sit in their domed stadiums and watch 20-hoppers on the pool-table artificial turfs of their cookie-cutter stadiums, the swagger that never sleeps suggested.
The stadium anticipated problems that would emerge 40 years later when cookie-cutter stadiums were in vogue.
Oriole Park has been conceived as the antithesis of vertigo-inducing cookie-cutter stadiums.
Due to the field being practically at street level, the original upper deck made the park look like a cookie-cutter stadium from the outside.
A subset of the multipurpose stadiums were the so-called "cookie-cutter stadiums" or "concrete donuts" which were all very similar in design.
The stadium would also not be symmetrical like the "cookie-cutter" stadiums of the pre-Camden, modern era.
Kauffman Stadium was built specifically for baseball during an era where building multisport "cookie-cutter" stadiums were commonplace.
Many of the seats in the two view levels are almost as high as comparable seats in cookie-cutter stadiums, especially in the back rows.