On April 8, the United States Tennis Association broke ground on its $60 million USTA National Campus in Lake Nona, near Orlando, one of the country’s fastest-growing communities. With 106 courts and 270,000 sf, USTA’s New Home of American Tennis, as it is being called, will be the largest tennis complex in the U.S.
When completed in late 2016, this 63-acre facility—USTA’s first year-round outdoor construction project—will include a Tournament and League Area with 32 Har-Tru clay courts, and 20 Plexicushion hard courts; a Collegiate Tennis Area with 12 Plexicushion hard courts and one future tournament show court; and a Team Tennis USA Area with 12 hard courts that will be used by the 17 USTA Sections, along with local coaches and their players throughout the country to work collaboratively with USTA Player Development.
A High Performance and Player Development Area—with eight Duro-turf hard courts and eight red clay courts—will be able to house 32 boys and girls, and include strength and conditioning components. The complex will also feature indoor and family-area courts, a pro shop, fitness center, locker rooms, lounges, a café-restaurant, and USTA offices.
The USTA National Campus will be a cornerstone for the community’s Sports Innovation & Performance District, an emerging athletic district with a focus on research, design, innovation and technology.
An on-site stadium will be able to accommodate two matches simultaneously and seat 1,200 spectators.
The Building Team on this project consists of Tavistock Development (developer), HKS Architects (architect), BBM (structural engineer), Exp (MEP engineer), EDSA (landscape architect), and DPR Construction (GC). California Products, Har-Tru, and Connor SportCourt are supplying the court surfaces.
“By housing our two divisions devoted to growing the game at all levels, and training the next generation of players and coaches, we can have a greater impact on the sport than we ever had before,” says Katrina Adams, USTA’s chairman and president. (This complex would replace the association’s smaller training facility in Boca Raton, Fla.) Among the dignitaries at the groundbreaking were City of Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer, and Orlando County Mayor Teresa Jacobs.
The 11-square-mile Lake Nona was a golf community surrounded by farmland and pastures when Tavistock Group, the developer’s parent, acquired it in 1996. The community is part of Orlando, and Tavistock has been working with that city’s economic development team to transform Lake Nona into what local officials are touting as city of tomorrow.
The USTA National Campus will be a cornerstone for the community’s Sports Innovation & Performance District, an emerging athletic district with a focus on research, design, innovation and technology. “We are launching what we think is the perfect partner to our Medical City,” said Rasesh Thakkar, senior managing director of Tavistock Group.
Over the past decade, Lake Nona has seen more than $2.8 billion and 2.4 million sf of clinical, institutional, laboratory space, and infrastructure completed or in active construction. The 650-acre Lake Nona Medical City health and science park—whose institutions include the University of Central Florida Health Sciences Campus and Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute—this year is adding the Orlando Veterans Affairs Medical Center and GuideWell Innovation Center.
Lake Nona’s 7,000 entitled acres offer nine residential communities that currently house about residents. Rob Adams, a vice president with Tavistock Development, tells BD+C that the community is entitled to build between 9,000 and 11,000 dwelling units, and will eventually house between 25,000 and 30,000 people.
The community is already served by three public schools, and three colleges. More than 5 million sf of commercial and retail spaces are in place. Lake Nona is where Johnson & Johnson has been conducting its multimillion-dollar, multiyear study on health and wellness. And the community is planning a 334-acre city park that will be Orlando’s largest.
Adams says Lake Nona’s build out is expected to take between 10 and 15 years. And he anticipates that the tennis complex will be a magnet for other business, such as apparel and fitness retailers, to come to this community.
Related Stories
Sponsored | Sports and Recreational Facilities | Feb 3, 2016
New $96.5 million Ole Miss Basketball Arena Opened in January
The recently constructed basketball arena at Ole Miss, The Pavilion, exudes sophistication due to its spectacular curved roof coated with a vibrant Terra Cotta Fluropon.
Sports and Recreational Facilities | Jan 29, 2016
Billion-dollar dome in Las Vegas could be the Oakland Raiders next home
The franchise, which is considering relocation if it can’t work out a stadium deal in the Bay Area, is listening to a new stadium pitch from investors in Las Vegas, led by the Sands Corp.
Giants 400 | Jan 29, 2016
SPORTS FACILITIES GIANTS: Populous, AECOM, Turner among top sports sector AEC firms
BD+C's rankings of the nation's largest sports sector design and construction firms, as reported in the 2015 Giants 300 Report
| Jan 14, 2016
How to succeed with EIFS: exterior insulation and finish systems
This AIA CES Discovery course discusses the six elements of an EIFS wall assembly; common EIFS failures and how to prevent them; and EIFS and sustainability.
Sports and Recreational Facilities | Jan 13, 2016
Multi-billion-dollar stadium planned as the NFL returns to Los Angeles
The Rams, formerly of St. Louis, will move into a new stadium possibly by 2019—and they might have a co-tenant.
Sports and Recreational Facilities | Jan 8, 2016
Washington Redskins hire Bjarke Ingels Group to design new stadium
The Danish firm is short on designing football stadiums, but it has led other impressive large scale projects.
Sports and Recreational Facilities | Jan 6, 2016
A solar canopy makes Miami’s arena more functional
NRG Energy teams with Miami Heat to transform an underused open-air plaza and reinforce the facility’s green reputation
Sports and Recreational Facilities | Dec 23, 2015
Kengo Kuma selected to design National Stadium for 2020 Tokyo Olympics
Japan chose between projects from Japanese architects Kuma and Toyo Ito. The decision has been met with claims of favoritism, particularly by the stadium’s original designer, Zaha Hadid.
Sports and Recreational Facilities | Dec 16, 2015
Tokyo down to two finalists for Olympic Stadium design
Both cost less than the Zaha Hadid proposal that was scrapped over the summer.
Sponsored | Sports and Recreational Facilities | Dec 14, 2015
Soccer Field in the Sky
House of Sports in Ardsley, N.Y., is home to a soccer field on the third floor of a downtown building.