Memorial Stadium, Bloomington
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Memorial Stadium | |
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| Location | 1200 E 17th St Bloomington, Indiana |
| Broke ground | August 27, 1958 |
| Opened | October 8, 1960 |
| Owner | Indiana University Bloomington |
| Operator | Indiana University Bloomington |
| Surface | Grass (1960-85), AstroTurf (1986-97), Grass (1998-2002), AstroPlay (2003-present) |
| Construction cost | $4.56 million USD |
| Architect | Eggers & Higgins, New York |
| Tenants | |
| Indiana Hoosiers (NCAA) (1960-Present) | |
| Capacity | |
| 50,180 | |
Memorial Stadium is a stadium in Bloomington, Indiana. It is primarily used for football, and is the home field of the Indiana University "Hoosiers". Memorial Stadium opened in 1960 as part of a new athletics area at the university and presently holds 50,354 people. The stadium is similar in structure to venues at Wake Forest (Groves Stadium) and Virginia Tech (Lane Stadium). It replaced the "old" Memorial Stadium, built in 1925, a 20,000 seat stadium located on 10th St where the arboretum now stands.
There have been many renovations since the original construction, including the replacement of wooden seats with aluminum, installation of sound and lighting systems, and laying of AstroTurf in 1986, which was subsequently replaced with natural grass in 1998. Prior to the 2003 season, that natural grass was removed. Indiana now plays football on a synthetic surface (AstroPlay).
On June 1, 2003 a $3.5 million renovation of the Memorial Stadium press box was completed. In the summer of 2003 the Hoosier locker room in Memorial Stadium underwent a $250,000 renovation. The facelift to the original 1986 facility included renovating and modernizing the existing space with new carpeting, lighting and a new bulkhead ceiling along with the installation of custom-built oak wood lockers for 105 football players. The renovation was funded in large part by former Hoosier quarterback Trent Green and his wife Julie.[1]
In 2005, head football coach Terry Hoeppner had a southern Indiana limestone boulder nicknamed "The Rock" installed in the north end zone as a new campus tradition. This limestone boulder was found prior to Hoeppner's first season at IU in the practice field. It was removed, put on a granite slab and moved to the stadium. The Hoosiers and coach Hoeppner walk out and touch the Rock before running onto the field at every home game.
In September of 2006, Indiana University announced plans to expand Memorial Stadium. The north endzone will be enclosed. This will provide additional space for classrooms, weight rooms, a Hall of Fame, and expanded seating for football. The University has not announced seating capacity of the expansion. The expansion will be part of an overall $55 million expansion of several Indiana University athletic facilities.
Demolition of the North End Zone bleachers took place in January 2007[2]. This left capacity for the 2007 season at 50,180 as 2000 seats were removed [3].
| Football Stadiums of the Big Ten Conference |
|---|
| Beaver Stadium (Penn State) • Camp Randall Stadium (Wisconsin) • Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome (Minnesota) • Kinnick Stadium (Iowa) • Memorial Stadium (Illinois) • Memorial Stadium (Indiana) • Michigan Stadium (Michigan) • Ohio Stadium (Ohio State) • Ross-Ade Stadium (Purdue) • Ryan Field (Northwestern) • Spartan Stadium (Michigan State) |