Stadiums, venues turned into mass vaccination centers

Stadiums, venues turned into mass vaccination centers


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Kirby Lee via AP The parking lot at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles is being transformed from a COVID-19 testing site into a mass vaccination site. En español | Just weeks into the massive


effort to vaccinate Americans against COVID-19, some states have advanced from inoculating only health care staff and nursing home residents to offering shots to older adults and certain


essential workers. In a bid to speed up the pace of vaccinations, familiar venues including sports stadiums, fairgrounds and convention centers are being transformed into mass vaccination


sites. Here's a look at several of the facilities being used to vaccinate residents. Check AARP's vaccine guide for your state to find out when you are eligible to receive a shot


and where you can get one. ------------------------- * LIST * | * SLIDESHOW * Photos * * * 1 of * PHOTO BY: ANTHONY BEHAR/SIPA USA/AP Images JACOB K. JAVITS CONVENTION CENTER – NEW YORK, NEW


YORK People wait in line to receive the COVID-19 vaccine at the Javits Center, which also served as a coronavirus field treatment hospital at the onset of the pandemic last March. * * * 2


of * PHOTO BY: Damian Dovarganes/AP Newsroom DISNEYLAND RESORT — ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA "The Happiest Place on Earth” takes on a new meaning for essential workers and residents 65 and


older waiting in line to receive the coronavirus vaccine. * * * 3 of * PHOTO BY: Eric Gay/AP Images ALAMODOME — SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS A health care worker administers a dose of the COVID-19


vaccine at the Alamodome, which is better known for hosting trade shows, concerts and sporting events. * * * 4 of * PHOTO BY: Matt Thomas/San Diego Padres/Getty Images PETCO PARK — SAN


DIEGO, CALIFORNIA People wait in line for their shot where baseball fans usually tailgate before a San Diego Padres game. * * * 5 of * PHOTO BY: ANTHONY BEHAR/SIPA USA/AP Newsroom BROOKLYN


ARMY TERMINAL — BROOKLYN, NEW YORK Margaret Interlandi, 80, fills out paperwork on the back of Bill Miller, 79, to register to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. The Brooklyn Army Terminal


originally served as the largest military supply base in the U.S. through World War II. * * * 6 of * PHOTO BY: Joe Raedle/Getty Images TROPICAL PARK — MIAMI, FLORIDA A driver gives a


thumbs-up as a passenger in his car receives a vaccine at the popular Miami park, built on the site of a former horse track. * * * 7 of * PHOTO BY: Bloomberg/Getty Images DODGER STADIUM —


LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA A line of cars stretched across the Dodger Stadium parking lot. Before being used as a vaccine center, the baseball stadium served as a coronavirus testing site. * *


* 8 of * PHOTO BY: Terry Tang/AP Images STATE FARM STADIUM — GLENDALE, ARIZONA The stadium, home of the Arizona Cardinals football team, is currently serving as a 24-7 vaccination site. * *


* 9 of * PHOTO BY: Al Bello/Getty Images JONES BEACH — WANTAGH, NEW YORK Long Islanders would usually take this road to spend a day at the beach. Today, it's lined with people waiting


in their cars to get their COVID-19 shots at the first drive-through vaccination site in New York. * * * 10 of * PHOTO BY: Mark Stockwell/AP Newsroom GILLETTE STADIUM — FOXBOROUGH,


MASSACHUSETTS First responders who were vaccinated at the home of the New England Patriots football team were monitored for 15 minutes after receiving the Moderna vaccine. Gillette Stadium


is the first large-scale vaccination site in Massachusetts. MORE ON VACCINES * When will older Americans get the COVID vaccine? * Some states put residents 65+ in line for vaccines *


What's it like to get the coronavirus vaccine?