Full of style and driven by innovation, CarMax Park is home to some of the most advanced LED technology UberDisplays has ever built. The outfield is anchored by a 3,648-square-foot main videoboard — the largest in Virginia and among the largest in all of Minor League Baseball — joined by the CareScout Power Tower, a nearly 34-foot vertical LED display that became the first of its kind in minor league baseball when the park opened. The first and third baselines are flanked by 435 linear feet of fascia displays running the length of the park. All told, the system totals 5,664 square feet of LED at 10mm and 10.47mm pixel pitch.
Thanks in large part to our friends at Anthony James Partners—CarMax Park opened on April 7, 2026 to a sold-out crowd. The Richmond Flying Squirrels beat the Altoona Curve 3–2, and the display system ran without a hitch.
The main videoboard and CareScout Power Tower aren't just prominent features of CarMax Park — they're positioned directly in the power alleys where home runs go. A well-struck ball in a Double-A ballpark leaves the bat at 90mph or better. Conventional LED panels aren't built for that. The typical outcome is cracked modules, dead pixels, and a repair that pulls a display out of service and requires expensive intervention to fix.
To solve this, UberDisplays installed our Rubberized LED across both power-alley displays — our patented impact protection system engineered to absorb baseball strikes up to 90mph without damaging the LED modules behind it. What makes Rubberized work in a live venue setting is what it doesn't do: it doesn't compromise the viewing experience. Rubberized maintains a 140° horizontal viewing angle, meaning the protection is effectively invisible to fans. The display looks and performs exactly as it would without it.
The Result: Both outfield displays can take a direct shot from the field without consequence — and every fan in the building still sees a crisp, full-brightness picture. The Flying Squirrels have a display system that can survive the game being played in front of it.

Fascia displays — the ribbon-style LED panels that line the face of stadium decks — create one of the most persistent maintenance problems in sports venues. To access a conventional fascia panel, a technician has to dangle over the upper deck edge, climb a ladder to the second level, or bring in a boom lift capable of reaching the display. It's time-consuming, expensive, and depending on the configuration, genuinely hazardous.
UberDisplays engineered the CarMax Park fascia system differently. The 435 linear feet of baseline displays are top-serviceable: a technician can disengage a panel directly from the upper level and lift it onto the deck for full access and service — no ladders, no lifts, no one hanging over an edge. What would otherwise require scheduling equipment, clearing a section of the park, and blocking out most of a day becomes a straightforward job a single technician can handle safely from the upper level.
The Result: Over the life of the display system, that serviceability difference compounds — in reduced equipment costs, faster repair windows, and a safer working environment for the people maintaining the park. The Flying Squirrels get a fascia system that's as practical on the back end as it is impressive on the front.
