New Fenway Features:
---The entrance to the new park would have been through what is now Yawkey Way, which would have been turned into a pedestrian walkway between the preserved sections of old Fenway and the main entrance to the new ballpark.
---The new ballpark would have had about 35 percent more space and over 10,000 more seats. It would also have had 100 luxury boxes, at least 5,000 premium club seats, upgraded concession areas, wider seats and bigger aisles.
---Restroom facilities would have been increased from eight for women and eleven for men to twenty-two for each.
---The Red Sox had said there would be no corporate name attached to the new park.
---Most of the characteristics and quirky dimensions of the playing field would have stayed the same, including the "Green Monster," Pesky's Pole, the center field triangle and the bullpens in front of the right field bleachers.
---The 1912 Tapestry Wall along the Gate A entrance on Yawkey Way, the infield, a large portion of the "Green Monster" and the manual scoreboard would have been preserved where they stand. In that area, a Red Sox Baseball Museum, Hall of Fame, and children's educational center would have been built.
---The team considered putting a ladder on the new left field wall.
---There would have been a red seat to commemorate where Ted Williams' 502-foot homer would have landed in the new park.