Thanks for the encouragement, and I've got your Polo Grounds note, Silvam!
Here's the other one I have ready right now--
Brooklyn's Eastern Park, also briefly known as Brotherhood Park and even more briefly known as Atlantic Park. There's a "biography" of it at SABR, found
here.
Eastern Park was home to the Brooklyn Dodgers from 1891-1897, back in their Bridegroom days. It was built for the Brooklyn Players' League team, however, which is where the "Brotherhood Park" moniker came from.
Google Drive link to Eastern Park
As is sometimes the case, there's both not much information available and what is available is contradictory. The model seems cock-eyed, for two reasons--first, the original left field dimension was seen as way too short and was lengthened in 1891 by moving the field away from the backstop and then rotating it a bit. Second, the one insurance map I found showed the two halves of the grandstand to be asymmetrical, and I went with the map rather than common sense. The positions and existence of outfield bleachers also changed with time, too. There's one photo out there, which shows the 3b end of the grandstand, and a few drawings. There's also a commercially-sold print (I included a screenshot below) that shows three towers vs. the two in this model. All in all I think this hangs together, though!
This is probably most like what the field was like in about 1893--I went with the pitching strip vs. pitching mound, and have the stands in what I think would be their final configuration. For sticklers I could make a version with a mound vs. pitching strip, the main reason I didn't do it already is because it takes 20 minutes to get this thing to output its .obj file--I'm 99% sure it's due to the too-detailed buildings I downloaded from 3D warehouse and stuck on Powell Street!
As usual, comments are welcome and I hope you enjoy it!