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Health and Wellness Center (Marshall University)

Coordinates: 38°25′24.8″N 82°25′23.9″W / 38.423556°N 82.423306°W / 38.423556; -82.423306
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Health and Wellness Center at Marshall University
Marshall University Recreation Center
Map
General information
TypeRecreation Center
Address402 Thundering Herd Dr, Huntington, WV 25703
Town or cityHuntington, West Virginia
CountryUSA
OpenedFebruary 5th, 2009
AffiliationMarshall University
Other information
ParkingJoan C. Edwards Stadium
Website
Official Website

The Marshall Recreation Center at Marshall University is located at 5th Avenue and 20th Street in Huntington, West Virginia. The complex is part of a $95 million expansion plan that includes two new "living-learning" residence halls [1]

History

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The Health and Wellness Center was proposed in a Board of Governors meeting on November 10, 2004, by the campus Student Government Association.[2]

On October 12, 2006, Marshall University purchased the Twentieth Street Baptist Church for $1 million with the intent of demolition.[2] The church's first service dates back to December 1926 and hosted its last service on March 25.[1] On January 24, 2007,[1] the school's board of governors approved a contract to tear down the church in early May; demolition began on May 21.[3]

Construction on the 123,000 sq ft (11,400 m2) recreational center began in July 2007 and was completed and opened to the public on February 5, 2009, at 2pm.he facility features an aquatic center with a 20-person spa, 3 lap lanes, Vortex Pool, and Lesuire area, a three-story climbing wall, a 1/7 mile running/jogging/walking track, courts for racquetball, volleyball and basketball, 4 specialized fitness rooms, and an 80,000-square-foot (7,400 m2), 2 floor fitness area with free weights, Nautilus, and cardiovascular machines.

Financing

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On May 14, 2007, the university Board of Governors approved a resolution on a partnership between the university and Capstone Management.[3] Capstone will own and operate the facilities until it has a return on investment.[4][5] The public-private partnership, the first in the state of West Virginia,[5] will help speed up construction and keeps other projects, such as the Engineering laboratory, in the pipeline.[5] It will also help keep the new buildings off the balance sheet.

The expansion is being funded with different bonds by two entities.[5] The university's bonds are insured, while Capstone's are without worth at the moment because the company will not have a return on investment until 2018. The public-private partnership will only work if the buildings create a revenue stream; the dormitory collects housing fees, while the student recreation center collects student fees. The funds will pay off the bonds. Capstone will own and operate the facilities for 30 years when ownership will transfer to the university.[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c LoPresti, Sarina (2007-01-31). "Here today, gone in May, Twentieth Street Baptist Church to be demolished to make way for recreation facility, residence hall". The Parthenon. Archived from the original on 2007-09-27.
  2. ^ a b "MU to break ground in spring on health center". Herald-Dispatch. 2007-01-31.
  3. ^ a b Hardiman, Jean Tarbett (2007-05-15). "MU construction set to begin". Herald-Dispatch.
  4. ^ McElroy, Justin (2007-02-12). "MU expansion on schedule". Herald-Dispatch.[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ a b c d e McElroy, Justin (2007-06-01). "MU predicts return on center". Herald-Dispatch.
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38°25′24.8″N 82°25′23.9″W / 38.423556°N 82.423306°W / 38.423556; -82.423306