Recreation centers keep popping up all over the country. These centers are typically large and expensive to build. Creative financing is often required to get these projects off the ground and to provide the programming that stakeholders want and need.
Take, for example, the 135,000-sf Foglia Foundation Health and Recreation Center at Harper College in Palatine, Ill., which reopened last September after a $41 million renovation of that 40-year-old building, led by designer CannonDesign and construction manager Mortenson.
The community college collaborated on this project with Northwest Community Healthcare, which agreed to pay for the fitout of a new clinic that originally was going to be 5,000 sf but expanded to 10,000 sf, says Steve Paterson, Harper College’s campus architect. The college leases this space, known as the NCH Outpatient Care Center, to the hospital, and its services are available to students, employees, and the community.
The Building Team added 10,000 sf to the rec center to make way for new fitness and exercise rooms, six classrooms, and team training and competition areas, including a new dedicated wrestling room and sports medicine facilities with a hydrotherapy bath. The rec center is also headquarters for the Harper Golden Hawks athletic department and teams.
Northwest Community Healthcare agreed to finance the fitout and enlargement of a leased clinic (above) within the Foglia Foundation Health and Rec Center. And the Palatine Parks District contributed to keep the facility's pool open (below), which the district operates. Image: Dave Burk, courtesy of CannonDesign
Palatine (Ill.) Park District kicked in $9 million toward the renovation to keep the facility’s pool open. The District operates the pool, says Paterson. whose programming includes aquatic, dance, sports, and fitness activities. “With one facility, we hit the trifecta,” says Mike Clark, the District’s executive director.
“I don’t know if we’ve ever done a project quite like this before,” says Roland Lemke, AIA, LEED AP, Design Principal for CannonDesign, about the way the renovation was funded. He observes that the rec center is mostly used by students during the day and by the community during nighttime hours.
CannonDesign was also involved in the new 120,000-sf Laurier YMCA Athletics and Recreation Centre in Brantford, Ont., which opened on September 14, 2018. The financing for this project came from the Y, the provincial and federal governments, corporate contributions, and Wilfrid Laurier University, whose campus is right next to the Y’s site.
The Laurier Brantford (Ont.) YMCA and Recreational Center, whose nearly 68 million Canadian dollars in funding came from government, academic, and private sources. Image: Adrien Williams, courtesy of CannonDesign
This project had been in the works for at least eight years. Prior to the opening of the new building, the Y had been operating out of a small, temporary space, and the university had “a very small gym” for a student body that had grown to 2,500, say Antonio Araujo and Ulrike Gross, respectively the university’s Active VP-finance and administration and Acting VP-facilities and asset management.
The plans shifted into higher gear two years ago, thanks to 500,000 Canadian dollars in government grant money that paid for the building’s initial design, from which emerged “a rough concept,” says Araujo.
The project appealed to the city of Brantford as a way to help revitalize its downtown, says Genevieve Hladysh, senior regional manager for the Brantford-Hamilton-Burlington YMCA and Recreational Center. The new Y sits on a three-block site on the south side of the city, which tore down 39 mostly vacant retail buildings to clear space for construction. (Araujo and Gross note that the university initially wasn’t all that interested in this site whose main block was entirely below grade.)
The Brantford YMCA includes a double gym. Image: Adrien Williams, courtesy of CannonDesign
The original budget for the new YMCA was 58.4 million Canadian dollars. But as more funding came on board, the budget rose to 67.7 million Canadian dollars. The federal and provincial governments each contributed C$16.7 million. The city provided $5.2 million, and another C$5.7 million was raised from a community capital campaign. The rest came from the YMCA and Laurier.
The building serves Brantford residents and university students with amenities that include an aquatics center, a double gym with retractable seating for 860 people, health consultation rooms, three studios, student lounge, and a 3,498-sf strength area.
This is the first Y to come together in an integrated space, and while the programming for each stakeholder group is spelled out contractually, “we tried to design the spaces to be as multifunctional as possible,” says Hladysh. Colleen McKenna, LEED AP, firmwide leader for CannonDesign’s sports, rec, and wellness practice, adds that while the university had a “big voice” in the programming, “there was balance and negotiation in the program distribution.”
The Y's membership now exceeds 5,300, and its aquatics center is open to students and the community alike. Image: Adrien Williams, courtesy of CannonDesign
Part of the new Y’s increased cost was attributable to the construction unearthing a large archeological find: nearly 440,000 indigenous artifacts that included coins, clothing, and pottery, some of which might date back to 500 BCE. Hladysh says that the YMCA enlisted Six Nations partners to monitor the excavation. She adds that some kind of exhibit space within the new Y is under consideration.
Related Stories
Sports and Recreational Facilities | Dec 7, 2015
High tech material makes Minnesota Vikings' new stadium's roof light and strong
U.S. Bank Stadium will have an ETFE (ethylene tetrafluoroethylene) pneumatic roof, a durable, flexible material made of a polymer similar to Teflon.
Sports and Recreational Facilities | Dec 3, 2015
Herzog & de Meuron unveils renderings of redeveloped stadium for Chelsea FC
As many as 264 brick piers will line the perimeter of the stadium and extend to a steel ring perched above the field.
Sports and Recreational Facilities | Nov 16, 2015
Edmonton's Rogers Place among North America's 'next-gen' stadiums
The home of the NHL’s Edmonton Oilers made Curbed’s list of 11 next-generation stadiums in North America. Also on the list are new venues for the NFL’s Atlanta Falcons and the NBA’s Milwaukee Bucks.
Sports and Recreational Facilities | Nov 13, 2015
It’s time to make MLB stadiums safer
Major League Baseball doesn't have official stadium design guidelines. Skanska's Tom Tingle has three ways the league can make the game safer for fans while still preserving its integrity.
Office Buildings | Nov 6, 2015
Real Madrid to get new headquarters designed by Rafael de La-Hoz
The design of the building is made of a set of two parallelepiped-shaped volumes.
Sports and Recreational Facilities | Nov 2, 2015
MJA Studio proposes converting Australian stadium into giant surf pool
The Subiaco Oval, which was built in 1908, could become the Subi Surf Park, a complex with apartments, stores, and a 300-meter-long wave pool.
Sports and Recreational Facilities | Sep 25, 2015
Italian soccer stadium designed to look like translucent waves
Architect Massimo Guidotti created a sinuous design for the stadium, which can support up to 16,000 seats.
Sports and Recreational Facilities | Sep 21, 2015
Tokyo Olympic Stadium saga ends for Zaha Hadid
After resubmitting a bid, the firm will not design the main venue for the 2020 Olympics after all.
Sports and Recreational Facilities | Sep 2, 2015
Proposed stadium for NFL's St. Louis Rams offers more than just football
The stadium's newest features have been unveiled by HOK, which could give the Rams one of the most inventive homes in the league—if it gets built.
Sports and Recreational Facilities | Aug 24, 2015
Green Bay Packers to start construction on a business district near Lambeau Field this fall
Flush with cash, the NFL team is kicking in about half of the $130 million for the 20-acre project’s first phase.