Dartmouth Big Green - Facilities

Facilities

Building Image Constructed Notes Reference
Berry Sports Center 1987 Berry Sports Center holds racquetball and basketball facilities (Leede Arena).
Boss Tennis Center 2000 The Alexis Boss Tennis Center, located behind Thompson Arena, contains six regulation tennis courts. The attached Alan Gordon Pavilion provides locker rooms and a lounge.
Burnham Field 2007 Burnham Field, located next to Thompson Arena, hosts men's and women's soccer teams in the 1,600-seat stadium.
Davis Field House 1926 Davis Field House, which overlooks the Memorial Field track, is a facility for varsity athletic teams.
Floren Varsity House 2006–2007 Floren contains a strength training center, a sports classroom, meeting rooms, locker rooms, equipment storage, and team offices.
Friends of Dartmouth Rowing Boathouse 1985–1986 The Boathouse sits on the banks of the Connecticut River, just north of the Ledyard Bridge.
Leverone Field House 1962–1963 Designed by Italian architect Pier Luigi Nervi, Leverone contains an indoor track and tennis courts.
Memorial Field 1921–1923 Memorial Field, Dartmouth's football and track & field stadium, was built on the site of previous athletic grandstands. It is named in memory of the Dartmouth alumni who died in World War I.
Thompson Arena 1975 Thompson Arena, Dartmouth's hockey facility, was also designed by Pier Luigi Nervi.
The Corey Ford Rugby Clubhouse 2005 The CFRC is the home of the Dartmouth Rugby Football Club and the Dartmouth Women's Rugby Club.
Jonathan Belden Daniels Climbing Gym 1995 The Jonathan Belden Daniels Climbing Gym houses annual intra- and inter-collegiate bouldering competitions as well as a collection of elite-level sport and trad climbers.

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Famous quotes containing the word facilities:

    Marriage is good enough for the lower classes: they have facilities for desertion that are denied to us.
    George Bernard Shaw (1856–1950)

    I have always found that when men have exhausted their own resources, they fall back on “the intentions of the Creator.” But their platitudes have ceased to have any influence with those women who believe they have the same facilities for communication with the Divine mind as men have.
    Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815–1902)