Galen Center
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Galen Center | |
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Location | University of Southern California |
Opened | October 12, 2006 |
Owner | University of Southern California |
Operator | University of Southern California |
Construction cost | $147 million USD |
Architect | HNTB |
Tenants | |
USC Trojan Athletics (NCAA) (2006-Present) | |
Seats | |
Basketball: 10,258 |
The Galen Center is the USC Trojans basketball and USC Volleyball facility for the University of Southern California Trojans. Located at the southeast corner of Jefferson Boulevard and Figueroa Street in the Exposition Park area of Los Angeles, it is right across the street from the campus and near the Shrine Auditorium. The architectural firm behind the design of the Galen Center is HNTB. In addition to basketball and volleyball events, the Galen Center will host concerts, pageants and theatrical performances. Local high school graduation ceremonies as well as CIF championships and the Academic Decathlon will also be held at the Galen Center.
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[edit] History
USC has planned to build an on-campus indoor arena for over 100 years. Before the Galen Center, USC basketball had been played at a variety of locations, including the neighboring Shrine Auditorium stage, the old Pan-Pacific Auditorium in the Fairfax District, and most recently the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena. The final push to build the new facility began in 2002, when Louis Galen, a successful banker and long time fan of Trojan Athletics, and his wife Helen donated $10 million to the new center immediately after USC football quarterback Carson Palmer won the 2002 Heisman Trophy. The Galens donated an addition $25 million to the project to have the building named after them and later upped their donation an additional $15 million to make sure than an connected practice facility would also bear their name, bringing the total donation to $50 million. Previously, the USC men's and women's basketball practice at the smaller, on-campus North Gym. The Galen Center replaced the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena as the home for USC men's and women's basketball.
Galen Center construction cost an estimated $147 million, which includes the arena, team offices, and a state of the art practice facility. The largest tax revenue would be generated by the city of Los Angeles' 10 percent parking tax. Other sources of tax revenue will include sales tax, utility users tax, business license tax, and income from advertising. In addition, two new parking structures were built: a 1,200-space structure was built between the Radisson Hotel and the arena, with access from Flower Street, and an additional structure the southeast corner of Figueroa Street and Exposition Boulevard. The additional parking structures also increased the available parking for both the USC campus and the nearby Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.
Construction officially began on October 31, 2004, with a groundbreaking ceremony including Los Angeles City Council members Bernard Parks and Jan Perry along with Helene and Lou Galen, longtime USC fans for whom the facility will be named after.
The first event, a women's volleyball game between USC and Stanford University, took place on October 12, 2006. The first concert at the Center was October 21, 2006 and featured Al Green. The first men's basketball game at the Center will be held on November 16th against the University of South Carolina[1]
Additionally, this facility is being considered (alongside UCLA's Pauley Pavilion) to play host should Los Angeles receive the 2016 Summer Olympics.
[edit] Jim Sterkel Court
The Galen Center's basketball court was named after former USC Basketball player Jim Sterkel, who played for Troy for two unremarkable seasons in the 1950s. Two unique factors in the naming rights were the obscurity of the name choice and that the Sterkel family was not aware that the court was named after the late-Jim Sterkel until after the facility had already opened. An anonymous donor and longtime friend of Sterkel made the $5 million dollar donation under the agreement that his name never be revealed. In an interview with Los Angeles Times columnist Bill Plaschke, Anonymous revealed that he grew up with Sterkel: both attended Mark Keppel High School, both began at USC in 1955 and were roommates, and though Sterkel never graduated from USC, the both remained friends. Sterkel himself averaged only 10 points per game on USC teams that were not successful. Later in life, Sterkel was hired by Anonymous, who had become a successful businessman. When Sterkel contracted cancer, Anonymous helped with his treatment. When the Anonymous' own son contracted leukemia, Sterkel wrote a poem for Anonymous, sealed it, and ordered it only to be read if Anonymous' son died. Sterkel died from cancer in 1997, Anonymous' son succumbed less than two years later. Touched by the poem and Sterkel's care, Anonymous made the donation to the Galen Center noting: "Some people don't deserve to be forgotten."
[edit] Facility information
The facility is 255,000 square feet, with a 45,000 square feet pavilion, and has three practice courts and offices. The seating capacity is 10,258, and there are 22 private suites. The rights to purchase tickets for approximately 1/3 of the seats are being sold through lifetime personal seat licenses, or PSL's, ranging from $2500-$10,000 per seat. PSL holders, who will be honored as "Galen Founders", will have the first right of refusal to purchase tickets for their seats for all sporting events and concerts held at the arena. Founders will have priority access to the on-site restaurant.
[edit] References
- Robyn Norwood, Galen Center Time Flies When They Have Funds, The Los Angeles Times, October 12, 2006.
- Bill Plaschke, Floored, The Los Angeles Times, November 5, 2006.
[edit] External links
- Press release on Galen Center
- uschoops.com page on Galen Center
- USC page on Galen Center neighborhood
- Economic fact sheet
- Galen Center Webcam
- 3D Galen Center
- Maps and aerial photos
- Street map from Google Maps or Yahoo! Maps
- Topographic map from TopoZone
- Aerial image or topographic map from TerraServer-USA
- Satellite image from Google Maps or Microsoft Virtual Earth
Current basketball arenas in the Pacific Ten Conference |
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Beasley Coliseum (Washington State) • Haas Pavilion (California) • Hec Edmundson Pavilion (Washington) • Galen Center (USC) • Gill Coliseum (Oregon State) • Maples Pavilion (Stanford) • McArthur Court (Oregon) • McKale Center (Arizona) • Pauley Pavilion (UCLA) • Wells Fargo Arena (Arizona State) |