Happy Sunday!
As noted early in this thread, the
Reds spent decades at the same site rotating their diamond around and building and rebuilding seating as economics and disaster required. In 1894 they moved home plate from League Park I and made the old backstop into the right field corner, and built new stands. That's what folks call League Park II. In 1900 League Park II caught fire, destroying the 1894 grandstand but not the earlier one, so they moved home plate again to the League Park I orientation and played that way through the 1901 season, then in 1902 they rebuilt the grandstand that had burned down in 1900, now calling it "The Palace of the Fans", which ended up the name of the whole ballpark. Then in 1912 they tore the whole thing down and rebuilt it as Crosley Field. Clear as mud, yeah?
The trick is that the park in that 1900-1901 period doesn't have a clear name and it's admittedly something of a niche concern. As far as I can tell, the OOTP park we have is the 1900-1901 configuration (which makes perfect sense given a priority of getting all the 20th century parks covered!) but the 1894-1900 configuration isn't. So, that's what this park is--the 1894-1900 configuration of Cincinnati's League Park, with the 1894 grandstand.
Google Drive Link to Cincinnati League Park II.
I naively thought that making this one would be as simple as moving home plate and rotating the field from League Park I, but I hadn't thought through that the other model was centered on its home plate and that having the origin of the coordinate system in the right field corner would make things look very odd. I also had to change a bunch of other things, but I was fittingly able to reuse the League Park I stands as well as some other elements like the background images, and I tried to keep the other nearby buildings in more or less their same positions as I could. I think I'm one central turret short of a full deck (so to speak) according to one of the drawings, but not according to the other one.
Next up I'll try to tackle some of the parks on Garlon's newer list that are unspoken for, though I'll start by giving the Cubbies some love...