Home of the Sacred Heart Pioneers | |
Full name | William H. Pitt Health and Recreation Center |
---|---|
Location | 5151 Park Avenue Fairfield, Connecticut 06825 |
Coordinates | 41°13′9.98″N73°14′40.66″W / 41.2194389°N 73.2446278°W Coordinates: 41°13′9.98″N73°14′40.66″W / 41.2194389°N 73.2446278°W |
Owner | City of Fairfield |
Operator | Sacred Heart University |
Capacity | 2,062 |
Surface | Mondo flooring |
Construction | |
Broke ground | 1995 |
Opened | August 17, 1997 |
Construction cost | $13.8 million ($23.3 million in 2021 dollars [1] ) |
Architect | Rose Tiso & Co. LLC |
Project manager | CPM & Associates |
Tenants | |
Sacred Heart Pioneers (NCAA) (1997–present) Connecticut Skyhawks (USBL) (1998–1999) |
The William H. Pitt Health and Recreation Center is a 2,062-seat multipurpose arena in Fairfield, Connecticut on the campus of Sacred Heart University. It was opened in August 1997 and is home to Sacred Heart University men's and women's basketball, men's and women's volleyball, men's wrestling and fencing. It hosted the finals of the 2008 Northeast Conference men's basketball tournament.
Constructing the facility cost $13.8 million. The William H. Pitt Health and Recreation Center has three levels and houses four basketball courts, a fitness center, an aerobics and fencing room, and a sports medicine and rehabilitation center. Outdoors near the Pitt Center, there is an artificial turf athletic field with an eight-lane outdoor running track, six artificial surface tennis courts, and several grass fields and trails around campus. [2]
In 2007, the Pitt Center underwent major renovations. On the lower level, a wrestling room, a weight room, more locker room space, and new floors were added. The Pitt Center also was re-painted. [3]
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The Victor R. Yanitelli, S.J. Recreational Life Center, known today as the Run Baby Run Arena, is a multipurpose athletic facility on the campus of Saint Peter's University, a private, coeducational Roman Catholic university in Jersey City, New Jersey, United States. Notable for its air-supported "bubble," the building opened in 1975 at a cost of $6 million and is named after the 17th president of the college.
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