1. U.S. Cellular Field | Baseball Wiki | Fandom

    https://baseball.fandom.com/wiki/U.S._Cellular_Field

    U.S. Cellular Field a.k.a. " The Cell " (formerly New Comiskey Park) is a baseball stadium in Chicago, Illinois. It is the home of the Chicago White Sox of the American League. The park opened for the 1991 season, after the White Sox had spent 81 years at Comiskey Park.

  2. U.S. Cellular Field

    https://ballparks.com/baseball/american/comis2.htm

    On May 7, 1989, ground was broken for the new Comiskey Park, now known as U.S. Cellular Field, a $167-million stadium built across the street from its predecessor 79 years after the cornerstone had been laid for the original ballpark. It was the first new baseball-only stadium built in the American League since 1973.

  3. U S Cellular Field, Chicago | Ticket Price | Timings ...

    https://www.triphobo.com/places/chicago-united-states/u-s-cellular-field

    With a seating capacity of 40,000 people, the U.S. Cellular Field is the home of the Chicago White Sox, a famous American professional baseball team. If you are a baseball fan or if you want to see what all the hype is about, book your tickets via their official website and have a thrilling time in Chicago.

  4. U.S. Cellular Field | Chicago, IL | WJE

    https://www.wje.com/projects/detail/us-cellular-field

    U.S. Cellular Field, formerly The New Comiskey Park, home of the Major League baseball team Chicago White Sox, opened in April of 1991 across from the original Comiskey Park. The new park was constructed with a cast-in-place concrete frame to which precast concrete exterior panels and seating risers were attached.

  5. Field Service Management| U.S. Cellular for Business

    https://business.uscellular.com/solutions/field-services/

    U.S. Cellular’s field service solutions allow you to start with what you need now, and add what you want later. Find out how it works by downloading the white paper “Build your way to better: How flexible field service solutions empower today’s managers.”