Duckworth Centre
Former names | University of Winnipeg Athletic Centre |
---|---|
Address | 400 Spence Street Winnipeg, Manitoba R3B 2E9 |
Coordinates | 49°53′32.5″N 97°09′16″W / 49.892361°N 97.15444°W |
Owner | University of Winnipeg |
Operator | University of Winnipeg |
Capacity | 1,780 |
Opened | September 14, 1984 |
Tenants | |
Winnipeg Wesmen |
The Duckworth Centre is an arena and gym on the University of Winnipeg campus in downtown Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
Constructed in 1983 and officially opened on September 14, 1984, it hosts the University's Winnipeg Wesmen basketball and volleyball games and has a listed seated capacity of 1,780 and a maximum capacity of 2,450 for convocations and conventions.
The facility is named after Henry Duckworth, a former University of Winnipeg administrator and an instrumental in the university's history.[1]
The facility can expand to include three full-size basketball courts or one centre court with two sides of retractable bleachers. The Lea Marc Printing Corporate suite oversees the centre court and is used for housing sponsors and VIP seating.
Encircling the court is a 167-metre indoor running/walking track.
The facility also houses six racquetball/squash/handball courts, change rooms and saunas, as well as administrative offices and athletic therapy services.
In December 2018, a new Ring of Honour was commissioned and installed to recognize the important and most successful builders and athletes in Wesmen history.[2] The inaugural class consisted of longtime women's basketball head coach Tom Kendall; point guard Sandra Carroll; longtime women's volleyball coach Mike Burchuk and current Wesmen head coach, and former all-star player, Diane Scott.
The Duckworth Centre also houses the Bill Wedlake Fitness Centre, named after the former basketball coach and administrator.
In 2019, it hosted the NORCECA men's volleyball championship tournament.[3]
References
[edit]- ^ "Henry Edmison Duckworth (Posthumous) | Awards and Distinctions | The University of Winnipeg". www.uwinnipeg.ca. Retrieved 2024-08-04.
- ^ "Wesmen fired up to host first women's Classic". University of Winnipeg. 2018-12-17. Retrieved 2019-02-12.
- ^ volleyball.events. "2019 NORCECA Men's Championship". Volleyball Manitoba. Retrieved 2019-02-12.
- University of Winnipeg
- Sports venues in Winnipeg
- Volleyball venues in Canada
- Basketball venues in Canada
- University sports venues in Canada
- Venues of the 1999 Pan American Games
- Indoor arenas in Manitoba
- 1984 establishments in Manitoba
- Sports venues completed in 1984
- Canadian sports venue stubs
- Manitoba building and structure stubs