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Hec Edmundson Pavilion
Hec Ed
Hec Edmundson Pavilion.png
Full name Bank of America Arena
at Hec Edmundson Pavilion
(2000-present)
Former names Clarence S. "Hec" Edmundson Pavilion (1948-99)
University of Washington Pavilion (1927-48)
Location University of Washington
Seattle, Washington
 United States
Opened 2000 - November 24 (renovation)
1927 - December 27
Owner University of Washington
Operator University of Washington
Construction cost $40 million - (renovation) - 2000
$600,000 - (original) - 1927
Architect LMN architects (renovation) [1]
Capacity 10,000 - (2000-present)
7,900 - ( -1999) - variable
12,961 - record (1957)
Tenants
Washington Huskies - NCAA
(1927-Present)

Bank of America Arena at Hec Edmundson Pavilion, commonly known as Hec Ed, is an indoor arena on the campus of the University of Washington in Seattle, the home of the Washington Huskies of the Pacific 10 Conference. Originally opened in 1927, the brick venue is home to the UW men's and women's basketball programs, as well as the women's volleyball and gymnastics teams. The current seating capacity of Hec Ed is 10,000 for basketball.

Contents

[edit] Early history

and immediately north of Husky Stadium, Originally the "University of Washington Pavilion," the building was constructed for $600,000 and opened on December 27, 1927. After twenty years, it was renamed the "Clarence S. "Hec" Edmundson Pavilion" on January 16, 1948, honoring the university's longtime track and basketball coach, a former Olympian who retired in 1947.

The building was designed as a multi-purpose field house, handling six or seven men's sports, including use as an indoor football field and track. Seating and flooring were intentionally mobile. The floor was originally dirt, and the football team practiced in the venue during bad weather. The basketball floor was laid over a bed of 2x4's, resulting in a variety of bounce characteristics.

Hec Ed originally had glass skylights in its ceiling. During the state high school basketball tournament in 1938, one of these fell during a windstorm, injuring two spectators, resulting in their permanent removal. [2]

[edit] Renovation

After 71 years, the multi-purpose arena underwent a major renovation in March 1999, following the final home games of the 1998-99 basketball season. The project took 19 months to complete and cost $40 million. The expansive interior of the building was reconfigured by LMN architects to make the arena environment more intimate for fans and players, and to improve the usage of the building's overall space.[3]

The east end of the building was sectioned off into a practice gymnasium and the main basketball court was moved fifty feet west, enclosed by a tighter bowl of seats. The seating capacity was increased from 7,900 to 10,000 while using significantly less of the building. Half of the seats (5,000) are the chair type, with the other half bleachers, of which 60% have backs.

UW volleyball vs. Cal
on October 3, 2008

Another major improvement was the removal of the twenty view-obscuring support pillars in the upper level, replaced by two massive non-obscuring "super trusses," above and behind the sidelines. Both are 243 feet (74 m) in length and painted yellow-gold, as are the supporting tri-leg columns in the arena's four corners, proudly exhibited in the concourses.

Additionally, the six large arched windows at the west end of the building were uncovered. Painted over for years, they were refitted with filtered glass to allow them to remain uncovered during games. The acoustical ceiling, installed in 1967 for use as a concert and music hall, was removed to expose the steel rafters. The rafters and the black ceiling above them were painted in an off-white buff tone.

New locker rooms, athletic offices, meeting rooms, training rooms, and a Hall of Fame section were also part of the project. The running track was removed, transferred to the new Dempsey indoor practice facility, which opened the following autumn.

At the re-opening in November 2000, the title "Bank of America Arena" was added, following a payment of $9.1 million by Bank of America for the 10-year naming rights. (Originally, the name was to be "Seafirst Arena." Although Seafirst was acquired in 1983 by B of A, it retained its brand until 2000, when it changed to "Bank of America.")

During the renovation, the Husky basketball teams were displaced for one season (1999-2000). They played their home games four miles away at Seattle Center; the men at KeyArena and the women at Mercer Arena.

[edit] Milestones

  • Hec Ed has hosted the NCAA basketball Final Four twice, in 1949 and 1952.
  • The overall attendance record for the building is 12,961, set during the semi-finals of the 1957 high school state basketball tournament. Hec Ed hosted the state tournament for over fifty years,
  • Arguably the biggest game in the building since its renovation occurred on March 6, 2004, when the UW men's basketball team hosted top-ranked and then-undefeated Stanford on national television, a game which the Huskies won 75-62.
  • On May 21, 1974, the pioneering jamband Grateful Dead performed to a sold-out audience in the arena.

[edit] References

  1. ^ The Seattle Times, "Dawgs and their new digs," 2000-11-21, p.C1
  2. ^ Seattle Post-Intelligencer, - " 'Hec' to the Future," - 1999-03-03, p.D-1
  3. ^ Go Huskies.com - Hec Edmundson

[edit] External links

Preceded by

Madison Square Garden
Williams Arena
NCAA Basketball Tournament
Finals Venue

1949
1952
Succeeded by

Madison Square Garden
Municipal Auditorium

Coordinates: 47°39′08″N 122°18′08″W / 47.65212°N 122.30223°W / 47.65212; -122.30223




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