shyde park. paul: i wish i brought pictures because shyde park is incredible. shyde park was 1909. it was one of the earliest of the golden age. one of the most ornate. it was like an elaborate beaux-arts building on the outside. then you go through this huge rotunda and you are in the field. as you saw it from the other side, it was just a field. the homew it from plate side, you could have thought it was an upper house. that was an incredibly important moment in the evolution of this. and then of course came forbes field in pittsburgh. and then fenway, tiger stadium, wrigley. whitney: which of those is the greatest? what are your standards of judgment? you do develop a clear way of thinking. maybe you could explain that to people, like what you think is good. paul: it is a combination of things. first, on the exterior, is it a nice piece of civic architecture that feels at home in the city? as if it belongs in a city and enriches a city. because a ballpark, other things is an important part of public space. along with parks we were beginning to develop in the mid-19th century and