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Memorial Athletic and Convocation Center

Multi-purpose arena on the campus of Kent State University

Memorial Athletic and Convocation Center

Summary

Multi-purpose arena on the campus of Kent State University

FieldValue
nameMemorial Athletic and Convocation Center
nicknameMAC Center, MACC
image{{Photomontage
photo1aKSUMACC.JPG
photo2aMAC Center panorama 2015.jpg
size250
positioncenter
colorwhite
border0
captionExterior in 2009; Interior in 2015
location1025 Risman Drive
Kent, Ohio 44242
United States
coordinates
broke_groundMay 3, 1949
built1949–1950
openedDecember 2, 1950
expanded1977–1979
renovated1990–1992
ownerKent State University
operatorKent State University
surfaceHardwood
construction_cost$1.33 million
($ in dollars)
architectFulton, Krinsky, and Dela Motte
Braun and Steidl (1992 renovation)
former_namesMen's Physical Education Building (1950–1956)
Memorial Gym (1956–1991)
tenantsKent State Golden Flashes (NCAA)
Men's basketball 1950–present
Women's basketball 1977–present
Women's gymnastics 1964–present
Women's volleyball 1978–present
Wrestling 1950–present
Men's gymnastics 1950–1994
Men's swimming 1950–1988
Women's swimming 1962–1988
seating_capacity6,327

Kent, Ohio 44242 United States ($ in dollars) Braun and Steidl (1992 renovation) Memorial Gym (1956–1991) Men's basketball 1950–present Women's basketball 1977–present Women's gymnastics 1964–present Women's volleyball 1978–present Wrestling 1950–present Men's gymnastics 1950–1994 Men's swimming 1950–1988 Women's swimming 1962–1988

The Memorial Athletic and Convocation Center, often referred to as the MAC Center and the MACC, is a multi-purpose arena on the campus of Kent State University in Kent, Ohio, United States. The building is primarily used as an athletic venue that is home to five Kent State Golden Flashes varsity athletic teams: men's basketball, women's basketball, women's volleyball, women's gymnastics, and wrestling. In addition, it hosts commencement exercises, speakers, and concerts throughout the year. The building houses the offices of the Kent State Athletic Department and the coaches of each of the university's varsity athletic teams.

The MAC Center opened in 1950 as the "Men's Physical Education Building" to replace Wills Gymnasium as the home of the men's basketball, wrestling, and men's swimming programs and men's physical education department. From 1956 to 1991, it was known as Memorial Gymnasium in honor of Kent State students who died in World War I and World War II. It was expanded in 1977 and underwent a major renovation between 1990 and 1992. Since 1992, the arena seating capacity has been listed at 6,327 in the basketball configuration. The MAC Center is a regular site for the Mid-American Conference championship meets for both wrestling and women's gymnastics and a past host of National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) events. As of 2024, the building is the 21st-oldest arena in NCAA Division I college basketball and oldest in the Mid-American Conference.

History

Plans for the MAC Center were drawn up in the late 1940s as Kent State saw a rapid enrollment increase in men following World War II. It was one of multiple construction projects at KSU during the post-war period, which included the first men's dormitory, Stopher Hall, in 1948, and a new practical arts building, later named Van Deusen Hall, in 1951. The state of Ohio approved funding in 1947 for the gym and work began in late April 1949 with an official groundbreaking on May 3, 1949. It was built on what was then the southern edge of campus on a hill overlooking Memorial Stadium, which was expanded with a new grandstand and press box dedicated in October 1950. The new Men's Physical Education Building was dedicated December 2, 1950, and hosted its first three athletic events that day as part of the dedication exercises. The wrestling team defeated Case Institute of Technology 21–8, followed by a 42–33 men's swimming victory over the Ohio Bobcats, and concluded with the men's basketball team claiming a 51–46 upset win over the Pittsburgh Panthers in front of approximately 4,000 fans. As of 2024 it is the 21st-oldest arena in U.S. college basketball.

In 1977 construction began on the MACC Annex (originally known as the Memorial Gym Annex or MGA), which included a new facility for the gymnastics team that connects with the main gym by way of a removable wall. Most of the Annex addition, which opened in 1979, was built as a separate building behind the MAC Center which is connected by a second floor bridge. The Annex originally included a large central gym with four adjacent basketball courts as well as auxiliary gyms, courts, a weight room, classrooms, and offices for the School of Dance and the School of Exercise, Leisure, and Sport and would serve as the Kent State Recreation Center until 1999. For many years, up until 2016, the Annex housed graduate student studios from the KSU College of Architecture in space taken from two of the original four basketball courts. Since March 2016, the Athletic Training and Education Center, a 10000 sqft sports medicine facility, is located in the Annex. It includes three therapy pools, a cryotherapy unit, training areas, and meeting rooms.

Interior view in 2010

The arena underwent a major renovation between 1990 and 1992. This renovation removed the swimming pool in the front of the building and replaced it with a new three-story entrance lobby, ticket office, and the Blue and Gold Club Loge on the third level. The renovation also included a new facade on the outside of the new lobby, a new scoreboard system, parquet floor, and improved lighting. The name of the facility was changed to Memorial Athletic and Convocation Center on November 20, 1991, as a result of a survey of students, alumni, faculty, and staff. In 2006, a new court was installed, along with a new scoreboard system.

Additional upgrades, such as a sideline LED display, were added in the late 2000s, and a new lighting system was installed in 2014. Larger renovations and remodeling have been discussed. In December 2006, KSU Athletic director Laing Kennedy discussed plans to renovate the lower level of seating to create a bowl and install chair-back seats for the entire level. With the new design, fans would enter all levels of seating from the second level instead of the current court-level entrances. Additional plans included renovating the Blue and Gold Club loge and dividing it into smaller private loges. No timetable was announced for the changes other than they would follow plans to upgrade Dix Stadium, which were completed in 2008.{{cite news

Athletics

Largest crowdsAttendanceDateOpponentResultLargest crowds since 1992 renovation
#5 St. BonaventureL 94–65
PurdueL 82–75
Miami (Ohio)L 47–45
Miami (Ohio)L 61–59 OT
#2 Loyola (Chicago)L 96–55
AkronL 66–64 OT
AkronW 63–57
AkronW 75–69
AkronW 73–68
AkronW 77–66

The arena has been the site of conference and NCAA events as well. During the 1960s, the MAC Center, then known as Memorial Gym, hosted the NCAA Wrestling Team Championship on two occasions. The 1963 tournament, won by the Oklahoma Sooners, was held over three days with a total attendance of over 16,000. The championship returned to Kent in 1967 and drew over 26,000 fans over three days, and was won by the Michigan State Spartans. The building has been a host arena for games in two NCAA Division I men's basketball tournaments. In the 1966 tournament, Memorial Gym was a host arena for two Mid-East regional quarterfinal games. The Dayton Flyers defeated the Miami Redskins 58–51 and the Western Kentucky Hilltoppers defeated the Loyola Ramblers 105–86. The MAC Center is also a regular site for Mid-American Conference events such as the women's gymnastics and men's wrestling championships. The inaugural Mid-American Conference Gymnastics Championships meet was held at the MAC Center in 1981 and the facility has hosted the meet six times through 2023.

Convocation and other uses

The MAC Center houses administrative offices for the athletic department, coaches' offices for the various teams, the main ticket office, and hosts a variety of events including guest speakers, concerts, and graduations for both the university and local high schools. University commencement exercises are held three times a year in May, August, and December. Before the development of class registration by way of telephone and over the Internet, the MAC Center was the long-time site of class registration along with Wills Gymnasium.

Concerts are held regularly in the arena and for many years, the MAC Center was a prominent concert venue for the region due to its relatively large indoor seating capacity. Until the Richfield Coliseum opened in 1974, the only arenas with larger seating capacities in the region were the 12,000-seat Cleveland Arena and 10,000-seat Public Auditorium, both in downtown Cleveland. Some of the musical acts to perform at the MAC Center over the years include Duke Ellington in 1957, Paul Simon and Pink Floyd in 1973, Jethro Tull in 1975, Peter Gabriel in 1978, the Outlaws in 1976, Phish in 1994, Peter, Paul, and Mary in 1995, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young in 1997, Smashing Pumpkins in 2000, Bob Dylan in 2002, Bruno Mars in 2011, Kendrick Lamar in 2013, and Wiz Khalifa in 2016.

The arena has also hosted speakers, comedians, and political figures. Comedian Bill Cosby performed two shows in 1969, and comedian Robin Williams came to the building in 1982. U.S. President Barack Obama became the first sitting president to visit Kent State University when he held a rally in the MAC Center as part of his re-election campaign in 2012. Democrat Hubert Humphrey also campaigned in the arena, holding a rally in 1968 as part of his presidential campaign. Other political figures to speak in the MAC Center include two former First Ladies, Eleanor Roosevelt in 1954 and Barbara Bush in 2000. Filmmaker Michael Moore spoke in the arena in 2004 in an event that included an appearance by actress/comedian Roseanne Barr. The event was part of Moore's Slacker Uprising Tour, which was later made into a documentary. Filmmaker Ken Burns spoke at the MAC Center in 2014 as part of the university's Presidential Speaker Series.

Layout

View of main lobby showing elevator and third floor

Built as a physical education building, the interior of the arena consists of seating areas on each side of the floor with balcony seating along each sideline. All seating sections are bleacher seats except for chairback seats in the lower sideline section opposite the team benches and in the Blue and Gold Loge.

On the first floor are located the main and auxiliary lobbies, restrooms, gymnastics training area, and athletic department offices. The Varsity K Hall of Fame is located outside the southern arena doors. There is also a display showing all the donors who have endowed scholarships to athletics. The main lobby is three stories high and was built as part of the 1992 renovations on what was originally the swimming pool. It includes an elevator, concession stands, the Steve Milkovich Family Ticket Office, team shop, the Laing and Saundra Kennedy Blue and Gold Trophy Room, and the Scolin MacLean Donor's Lounge (nick-named "The Scolly Bear Lair") which houses the offices of The Golden Flashes Club. The four auxiliary lobbies are located at each corner of the arena and provide access to restrooms, drinking fountains, and stairs to the balcony sections. Football office are located near Lobby A, Men's Basketball offices near Lobby B, Women's Basketball offices near Lobby C, and Volleyball offices are located near Lobby D.

The team locker rooms, additional coaches' offices, GFTV, Equipment Room, and storage are located on the second floor, underneath the balcony sections.

References

References

  1. (2008-10-28). "The MAC Center". Kent State University.
  2. "Campus Building Information". Kent State Architecture Library.
  3. Kent State Athletic Communications. (2008-03-06). "MAC Decides '08". Kent State University}} {{Dead link.
  4. Kent State Athletics Communications. (2008-03-27). "Kent State Gymnasts Battle For 10th Conference Championship On Home Mats". Kent State University}} {{Dead link.
  5. (June 27, 1947). "State Approves KSU Physical Ed Building". Kent Stater.
  6. (May 6, 1949). "Excavation Begins...". Kent Stater.
  7. (December 4, 1950). "Kent State's Grapplers In 21–8 Triumph". [[Record-Courier (Ohio).
  8. (December 4, 1950). "KSU Tankers Nip Bobcats". [[Record-Courier (Ohio).
  9. (December 4, 1950). "Flashes Surprise Pitt In Initial Fray, 51-46". [[Record-Courier (Ohio).
  10. In its original configuration, building included the main gym and a pool, connected by a removable wall, as well as offices and other rooms to house the Physical Education department. The building replaced [[Wills Gymnasium]], built in 1925, as the home of the Golden Flashes men's basketball, swimming, and wrestling teams. In 1956, the Men's Physical Education building was rededicated as Memorial Gym in honor of Kent State students who died in both world wars.This information comes from the dedication plaque located in the main lobby
  11. (December 12, 2016). "Athletic Training and Education Center". [[Kent State University]].
  12. Babbo, Scott. (November 21, 1991). "Trustees fear the belt will get tighter". Daily Kent Stater.
  13. (2013). "Arena Upgrades & Fan Experience". [[Kent State University]].
  14. (August 29, 2016). "THE GAME PLAN: New Chair-Back Seats installed in M.A.C. Center". [[Kent State University]].
  15. (December 1, 2010). "Kent State Celebrating The M.A.C. Center's 60th Anniversary On Thursday Night Against Louisiana at Monroe". Kent State University Athletics.
  16. (2009). "2009–10 Kent State Women's Basketball". Kent State University Athletics.
  17. (December 2, 2010). "Gymnastics Team Readies for 2011 Season with Blue & Gold Intrasquad Meet". Kent State University Athletics.
  18. (2013). "Championship History". [[National Collegiate Athletic Association]].
  19. (March 31, 1967). "MSU Pins Down Title In NCAA Mat Tourney". Daily Kent Stater.
  20. (2014). "Gymnastics". [[Mid-American Conference]].
  21. (1993). "A Book of Memories: Kent State University 1910-1992". Kent State University Press.
  22. Prufer, Jason. (May 26, 2011). "Duke Ellington's Lost 1957 Performance at Kent State". Kent Patch.
  23. Sherry, Blake. (October 27, 1978). "Gabriel gives 'stellar' performance". Daily Kent Stater.
  24. "Nov 12, 1994 Setlist".
  25. Aikens, Nicole. (April 29, 2011). "Flashfest 2011 leaves with a bang". KentWired.
  26. Simon, Linda. (November 18, 1969). "Cosby Draws Full House, Critic's Praise". Daily Kent Stater.
  27. Murray, Mike. (October 26, 1982). "Williams' crazy antics dazzle KSU audience". Daily Kent Stater.
  28. (October 5, 2012). "President Obama Visits Kent State". [[Kent State University]].
  29. Froelich, Janis. (May 7, 1968). "SOCK IT TO 'EM. H.H.H.".
  30. Urycki, Mark. (October 25, 2004). "Fahrenheit 911 Film-maker Michael Moore at Kent State University". [[WKSU.
  31. Dawidziak, Mark. (April 13, 2015). "Ken Burns film 'The Address' airs a week before his talk at Kent State". [[The Plain Dealer]].
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