MONMOUTH, Ill. — By the fall of 2009, Monmouth College’s outdoor
stadium for football and track and field will have an entirely new look.
Construction began this week on the first of two phases of renovation
of the Fighting Scots’ home field. Phase one, which will involve
construction of new seating and a new press box, will be completed prior
to the Scots’ first home game against Lawrence University on Sept. 13.
The second phase of the project will be completed during the spring
and summer of 2009. A synthetic turf field will be installed and lights
will be added for evening events and intramural sports.
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Walter S. Huff Jr. ’56 |
Walter S. Huff Jr. of Atlanta, Ga., an emeritus trustee of Monmouth
College who graduated in 1956, has provided the naming gift for the
project in memory of his late wife, April Zorn Huff, Monmouth College
Class of 1959. Huff has contributed to major projects at his alma mater
in the past, most notably the Huff Athletic Center, which was completed
in 2003.
"April was very fond of Monmouth College football," said Huff. "That
fondness goes back to her days as a student, when she participated in
the Pep Club and school band. She enjoyed going to football games,
whether it be high school, college or professional games. April’s family
will be thrilled to have her alma mater’s stadium named in her memory."
Other donors are stepping forward to support the stadium renovation.
Monmouth College will celebrate the project’s completion by holding a
dedication ceremony for April Zorn Memorial Stadium at the start of the
2009 football season.
The new synthetic turf field will remain known as Bobby Woll Memorial
Field.
"The stadium project continues the improvement and transformation of
the Monmouth College campus," said president Mauri Ditzler. "Our
intercollegiate football and track and field programs and our intramural
sports will all benefit greatly."
In the first phase, the field’s predominantly metal bleachers and
wooden press box will be replaced by attractive concrete and brick
structures. The enclosed press box, which will remain on the east side
of the field, will be 120 feet long, spanning the distance between the
two 30-yard lines.
The bleachers will extend farther on both sides and, beyond them, the
hillside will be terraced into seven or eight levels.
"Fans in those areas will either be able to sit on the retaining wall
that separates each terrace, or they’ll be able to put their lawn chairs
on the flat areas, which will be about six feet deep," said Don
Gladfelter, MC’s vice president for finance and business.
Other new seating will include 144 red fold-down seats in the top
three rows beneath the press box.
"We haven’t decided exactly how we will use those, but they might be
available for season ticket holders or for parents on Family Weekend,"
said Gladfelter.
On the west side, permanent seating will replace the moveable
bleachers that have been used for many years.
"Our goal is to become the most hospitable venue in the Midwest
Conference for visiting teams and their fans," said President Ditzler.
"The upgrades on the west side of the field will contribute to that
goal."
All told, the seating renovations will expand the stadium’s capacity
from 1,400 to 2,600.
Atop the "home" bleachers will be a first-class press box. Gladfelter
called it a "huge improvement," with upgrades including three separate
booths for broadcast media and rooms for home and visiting coaches and
special guests of the college, in addition to the normal space reserved
for game day personnel and print media reporters.
"We are also going to add sophisticated camera equipment, including a
camera on the west side of the field that can be operated by remote
control," said Gladfelter. That type of upgrade is necessary, Gladfelter
explained, as the college is now required by the Midwest Conference to
webcast all of its home football games, among other sports. "We’ll now
have the potential for three different camera angles during a
broadcast."
In 2009, broadcasts will show the Scots and their opponents playing
on synthetic turf, making Monmouth the fifth of 10 schools in the
conference to switch to that type of playing surface. Both the lights
and the synthetic turf will be of great benefit to the college’s growing
intramural program as well, alleviating space concerns and allowing
outdoor recreation and other events, such as marching band practice, to
continue into the evening hours.
The Fighting Scots have been playing at their current location since
the 1980 season, when a field that was constructed in 1968 was expanded
north to East Euclid Ave. The original football field, built in 1923,
was located just south of the current facility.
Metzger-Johnson Architects, Inc., of Galesburg is in charge of the
stadium’s design. Russell Construction of Bettendorf, Iowa, is the
general contractor.