A blog for Glen S. Hummer-coached Huntington YMCA and co-ed team alumni to post reminiscences, updates, and whatever remotely might have to do with swimming then or even now.
Monday, June 4, 2007
Hallelujah!
The YMCA has received just more than $6.9 million in pledges as it works toward raising $9 million for the new building, and $131 of that was donated by friends of Toriana Simoes - who asked for donations to the Y instead of presents for her birthday. Simoes was one of the speakers at the groundbreaking ceremony.
The current Warren Street building will be replaced by a larger facility in front of Parkview Huntington Hospital, which donated the land and pledged an additional $1.55 million for construction. Huntington University will also make a major donation to the project, with plans to close its pool and use the YMCA facility instead.
Construction is set to begin in mid-June, and the new building should be open by late summer or early fall of 2008.
Welcome
Huntington YMCA Building Program
Note: To donate to the fund-raising campaign for the new YMCA (and its Hummer Pool) contact:
Dan Akeley, Executive Director, Huntington YMCA, 607 Warren St., Huntington, IN 46750, 260-356-4200, ymcadan@kconline.com
From The Herald Press12/18/06
Goal: $8 million; In hand: $5.4 million; Yet to raise: $2.6 million
It will take $8 million to build a new YMCA, and that's the amount the Y's fund-raising committee has set as its goal.
With the $2 million gift from
From The Herald Press, 12/18/06
The inside story: Nearly double the usable space
By CINDY KLEPPER, City Editor
The new Parkview Huntington YMCA will encompass about 52,000 square feet, all on one floor, with two pools, two basketball floors, and an elevated walking track.
By comparison, the current facility has about 30,000 square feet of usable space on three levels, one pool, one basketball court, and no dedicated place to walk - although it does have numerous nooks and crannies that may have had a function when the
The new building was designed by Moake Park Group, a Fort Wayne-based architectural firm whose work can be seen in the
"We learned a lesson from the Jorgensen YMCA," Akeley said. "They have one pool, and if someone has an accident in the pool, they have to shut down the whole thing."
The Huntington Y board decided to go with two pools, side by side.
"If somebody has an accident, we can just shut the one pool down," Akeley said.
The smaller pool will have a "zero," or sloped, entry making it accessible to people in wheelchairs and others with limited mobility. It's water will be warm enough to be comfortable for swimming and aerobics classes.
The second pool will be large enough to be used by swim teams and can also be used to host meets.
The gym's two basketball courts can be separated by a curtain. A fitness center will include both free weights and cardio equipment, and an adjacent aerobics/dance area will feature floating floors.
A walking track, one-tenth of a mile long, will be suspended around the perimeter of the gym, fitness center, and aerobics/dance area.
An expanded child watch area will be located next to two preschool rooms.
No comments:
Post a Comment