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Arthur J. Rooney Athletic Field
Location 600 Forbes Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15282
Opened 1993
Owner Duquesne University
Operator Duquesne University
Surface Sportex Momentum Turf
Construction cost $2.5 million
Architect WTW Architects
Tenants Duquesne Dukes (NCAA)
(1993–present)
Capacity 4,500[1]
File:DuquesneRooneyField.JPG

Rooney Field as seen from Mellon Hall.

Arthur J. Rooney Athletic Field is a 4,500-seat multi-purpose facility in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Situated on the campus of Duquesne University, it is the home field of the Duquesne Dukes football team.

Its location atop the Bluff in the center of Duquesne's campus makes Rooney Field one of the most unusual football facilities in the nation. Bordered by Academic Walk on one side and Mellon Hall of Science and the Duquesne Towers Living and Learning Center on either end, the field offers scenic views of downtown Pittsburgh, the Monongahela River, and Pittsburgh's South Side.

Rooney Field has enjoyed the national spotlight as the host of three televised games. On Monday, October 31, 1994, ESPN2 televised Duquesne's 16–12 win over Iona College to a national audience. In addition, two games in 1995—the MAAC Championship-deciding game versus St. John's and the ECAC Bowl game vs. Wagner—were aired locally by was then the Prime Sports Network.

Description[]

The 1993 completion of Rooney Field enabled the Dukes to play football on campus for the first time since 1929. A 6-foot (1.8 m) excavation transformed what was once a faculty and staff parking lot into the centerpiece of Duquesne University's urban campus. The space limitations inherent to the university's 49-acre (19.8 ha) plot required that Rooney Field be one of the few in college football that run east to west.

The Beard Press Box, a three-tier structure funded by a contribution from the Eugene Beard family, was completed in the summer of 1995. The field itself is named for Duquesne alumnus and founder of the Pittsburgh Steelers, Art Rooney. Prior to the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Sportsplex opening in 2000 the field and other university facilities served as either the primary or secondary in-season training facilities for the Steelers since their founding in 1933.

In addition to serving as home for the Duquesne men's and women's soccer and lacrosse teams, numerous other activities are held on Rooney Field. Various camps, team practices and intramural activities keep the field in constant use.

Renovations[]

Bolstered by the first half of a $4 million renovation completed in 2009, the lighted, Sportexe turf-covered facility celebrates its seventeenth full-season anniversary in 2010.

Part of the recently completed renovation is permanent grandstand seating on Bluff Street, which replaces temporary bleachers that had been installed for fourteen football seasons. Permanent concession stands and restrooms have also been added to the south side of the field. The Academic Walk sideline has also gained additional seating. As part of the second stage of the renovation, the fieldhouse located at the east end of the field will be remodeled and expanded to provide an area for a new football locker room, football coaches' suite, and additional locker room space for the soccer, lacrosse, and swim teams. Fieldhouse construction is scheduled to begin following the 2008–2009 athletics season.

References[]

Template:Duquesne Dukes football navbox

Coordinates: 40°26′8″N 79°59′24″W / 40.43556°N 79.99000°W / 40.43556; -79.99000


This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Arthur J. Rooney Athletic Field.
The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with American Football Database, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License.

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