Beaver Stadium
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Beaver Stadium | |
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Happy Valley | |
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Location | University Park, Pennsylvania |
Opened | 1909 (rebuilt 1960) |
Owner | The Pennsylvania State University |
Operator | The Pennsylvania State University |
Surface | Grass |
Former names | |
New Beaver Field | |
Tenants | |
Penn State Nittany Lions (NCAA) (1909-Present) | |
Capacity | |
107,282 |
Beaver Stadium is located on the campus of The Pennsylvania State University and is home to their college football team, the Nittany Lions. Named for James A. Beaver, a former governor of Pennsylvania and president of the University's board of trustees, the stadium currently has a capacity of 107,282, making it the second largest stadium in the United States, smaller than Michigan Stadium by only 219 seats.
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] Predecessors
Until 1893, Penn State teams participated in sporting events on Old Main lawn, a large grassy area in front of the primary classroom building of the time. Beaver Field, a 500-seat structure located behind the current site of the Osmond Building, was the first permanent home for Penn State's football team, and the first game played there was a Penn State victory over Western University of Pennsylvania (now the University of Pittsburgh) on November 6, 1893. In 1909, New Beaver Field opened just northeast of Rec Hall, roughly in the current location of the Nittany Parking deck. It served as Penn State's stadium until 1960, when the entire 30,000 seat stadium was dismantled and moved to the east end of campus, reassembled and expanded to 46,284 seats, and dubbed Beaver Stadium.
[edit] Expansions
Expansions in 1969, 1974 and 1976 increased capacity to 60,203. In 1978, 16,000 seats were added when the stadium was cut into sections and raised on hydraulic lifts, allowing the insertion of seating along the inner ring of the stadium where the track had previously been located. In 1980, maximum capacity increased to 83,770. An expansion was completed for the 1991 football season, placing an upper deck addition over the north end zone and raising capacity to over 90,000.
A major and somewhat controversial construction project took place in 2001, raising the stadium's total capacity to 107,282. An upper deck was added to the south end of the stadium, blocking the view of neighboring Mount Nittany (which had sentimental value for some fans), but making Beaver Stadium the second largest stadium in the United States.
In 2006, the stadium underwent major structural and aesthetic upgrades. Old steel beams supporting the upper seats in the east, north and west were replaced and strengthened, and new railing was installed, stronger than the old railing which collapsed following the 2005 Ohio State game.
The appearance of the stadium has been enhanced with the addition of large blue letters spelling out "The Pennsylvania State University" on the west-facing suites, and a list of Penn State's undefeated, national championship, and Big Ten championship years underneath. On the opposite side of the stadium, letters spelling, "Penn State Nittany Lions" have been added to the press box, with "Beaver Stadium" running below. Nine markers depicting the various traditions of Beaver Stadium, including the Blue Band, the student section, and the blue buses which bring the team to the stadium, have been placed around the stadium as well. In late October, the walls surrounding the field were refaced with Pennsylvania limestone. An iron gate will soon replace the current chain-link face at the players' entrance into the stadium.
[edit] Records
Beaver Stadium's largest crowd of 110,753 was present for Penn State's 40-7 victory over the University of Nebraska on September 14, 2002.[2] Penn State also set an NCAA record in 2002 for largest season attendance, with 1,257,707 watching Penn State games over the course of the season.[3]
It is boasted by the Penn State community that during home games at State College the stadium is the 3rd largest city by "population" in the state. It follows Philadelphia (1,517,550) and Pittsburgh (334,563) and precedes Allentown (106,632).
[edit] References
- ^ Penn State-Ohio State Clash Delivers ESPN's Second Largest College Football Audience. GoPSUsports. Retrieved on 2006-05-30.
- ^ Penn State Team Game-by-Game Statistics. GoPSUsports. Retrieved on 2006-05-30.
- ^ Penn State Fans Earn Top Four Finish in NCAA Football Attendance For 15th Consecutive Year. GoPSUsports. Retrieved on 2006-05-30.
[edit] External links
The Pennsylvania State University | ||
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Academics |
College of Earth and Mineral Sciences • Schreyer Honors College • Smeal College of Business • Commonwealth Campuses |
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Athletics |
Beaver Stadium • Bryce Jordan Center • Football • Governor's Victory Bell • Land Grant Trophy • Medlar Field at Lubrano Park • Penn State Golf Courses • Rec Hall |
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Campus |
Hetzel Union Building • Old Main • Pattee and Paterno Libraries • Penn State Creamery • Residence halls • ResCom • University Park |
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People |
George W. Atherton • James A. Beaver • Milton S. Eisenhower • Joe Paterno • Rene Portland • Graham Spanier • Fred Waring |
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Media |
The Daily Collegian • Phroth • The Lion 90.7FM • WPSU-FM • WPSU-TV |
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Student Life / Traditions |
Alma Mater • Blue Band • Fight On, State • Mount Nittany • Nittany Lion • Nittwits • Old Coaly • Penn State Dance Marathon • State College • The Nittany Lion |
Football Stadiums of the Big Ten Conference |
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Beaver Stadium (Penn State) • Camp Randall Stadium (Wisconsin) • Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome (Minnesota) • Kinnick Stadium (Iowa) • Memorial Stadium (Illinois) • Memorial Stadium (Indiana) • Michigan Stadium (Michigan) • Ohio Stadium (Ohio State) • Ross-Ade Stadium (Purdue) • Ryan Field (Northwestern) • Spartan Stadium (Michigan State) |