The Petersen Sports Complex (PSC) is a 12.32 acre (4.99 ha) multi-sport sports facility on the University of Pittsburgh campus in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Here are Charles L. Cost Field, Vartabedian Field, and Ambrose Urbanic Field, each home and competition venue from NCAA University Division I athletic, baseball, softball, and men's and women's soccer teams. Known as Pittsburgh (Pitt) Panthers, these teams compete in the Atlantic Coast Conference. The complex is located adjacent to the Trees Hall and Sports Center School fees near the rest of the other athletic facilities on the top campus.
Video Petersen Sports Complex
History
The sports complex is a project that has been developed since the closing of Pitt Stadium 1999 on the university campus. With the demolition of stadiums, soccer teams, tracks & amp; field teams, marching bands and many of the university's intramural programs lost their homes. Baseball and sofbol university teams have long played in places deemed to be inadequate facilities at Trees Field tucked into the back of the School's Fee Sports Center. In the interim, football teams have moved their home games to the founder's Field outside campus at Cheswick.
The complex is built on the former Robinson Court housing project. The land was acquired after five years of sometimes controversial negotiation between universities, housing developers, and the City of Pittsburgh. The final cost of the 12.3-acre (50,000m 2 ) site for the university is a total contribution of $ 7 million in payments and community contributions that doubled the offer of several developers in 2005. The sale of land was officially approved and Pitt bought the package was in the second half of 2008. The land was damaged in the complex in the fall of that year. Estimated cost of complex construction is $ 29 million. It was named after alumnus John Petersen and his wife Gertrude who donated an undisclosed amount for its construction. The baseball field has been named Charles L. Cost Field, after an alumnus who is also the name of the neighboring Cost Sports Center, while the softball field has been named Vartabedian Field and the soccer field has been named Ambrose Urbanic Field. The Petersen Sports Complex hosted the first official athletic contest with a March 16, 2011 baseball game between Pitt and Kent State. The grand opening ceremony, called "First Pitch Event", took place on April 9, 2011, and featured a contest involving all four sports teams that will use the facility.
Following the completion of the sports complex, former baseball and sofbol facilities at Trees Field are planned to be transformed into new tracks and field complexes.
Maps Petersen Sports Complex
Complex
The Petersen Sports Complex includes three places of competition and practice, including for baseball, softball and men's and women's soccer. In addition, the complex includes a two-storey two-storey support building (2,100 m 2 ) that houses a dressing room for each sport as well as special equipment and athletic training facilities. Indoor batting training facilities, serving baseball and softball teams, are also located within the facility and are located adjacent to Charles L. Cost Field. The concession area is located within the supporting section of the building that runs along Ambrose Urbanic's line of soccer field. Outside the facility, the ticket book is adjacent to the entrance plaza containing University University's seal depiction on its granite surface. In the entrance plaza is a silhouette statue of an athlete representing each of the crawling teams who call the complex house. Behind each of these numbers is a plaque to honor those who contribute to the construction of the facility.
Ambrose Urbanic Field
Male and female football facilities include Ambrose Urbanic Field 735 seats. Used for workouts and competitions, facilities including lighting and press boxes. The football field will use FIFA's "Duraspine" version of FieldTurf as found at Gillette Stadium and Qwest Field. The first match held at a football facility is an exhibition played by a men's team against the Pittsburgh Riverhounds on March 20, 2011.
Charles L. Field Fee
Baseball facilities include a 900-seat Charles L. Cost Field, a press box, underground team room, bullpens, and pitching and drilling area. Turf grass synthetic turf is installed in both the field and off the field to allow playing and practicing throughout the year and lighting is installed for the evening game. This field has a 300-foot (91 m) baseline and 375-foot (114 m) gate strength, and 405 feet (123 m) into the central field. The field is named after a letterman of three sports and former Pitt football running back Charles L. "Corky" Fee. Scoreboard donated by Armand C. Dellovade.
The first match held at Cost Field was Pitt's 10-7 loss to Kent State on March 16, 2011. Pitt's first win at the facility was a 9-6 victory over Niagara on 18 March 2011.
Field of Vartabedian
The softball facility includes a 600-seat Vartabedian Field, which features a skinned infield with artificial grass. The stadium includes teams excavated, hitting and throwing exercises, lighting, and press boxes. The first softball game played on Vartabedian Field was Pitt's 2-1 victory over Penn State on 29 March 2011.
See also
- List of NCAA Division I baseball places
References
External links
- Petersen Sports Complex
Source of the article : Wikipedia