Western Alumni Stadium Explained

Stadium Name:Western Alumni Stadium
Location:London, Ontario
Broke Ground:September 28, 1999[1]
Opened:September 16, 2000[2]
Renovated:2007
Owner:University of Western Ontario
Surface:FieldTurf
Construction Cost:$10.5 million[3]
Architect:Stantec Consulting Ltd.
Main Contractors:Norlon Builders London Ltd.[4]
Tenants:Western Mustangs (U Sports): 2000–present
FC London (USL PDL): 2009–2013
London Beefeaters (CJFL) 2000–2019
London Silverbacks (NAFL): 2004–2008
Seating Capacity:8,000
Scoreboard:Yes
Cost:$10.65 million[5]
Western Alumni Stadium
Former Names:TD Stadium
TD Waterhouse Stadium[6]

Western Alumni Stadium (formerly TD Stadium) is an 8,000-seat Canadian football stadium located on the campus of the University of Western Ontario in London, Ontario. It is home to the Western Mustangs football team and is one of the largest stadiums in the OUA provincial conference.[7] It was built in 2000[8] at a cost of approximately $10.65 million by Norlon Builders London Ltd and designed by Stantec Consulting Ltd.[9]

The stadium was built as a replacement for the former JW Little Stadium, which held its last game in 1999 before demolition. JW Little Stadium had been on Western's campus since 1929.[10] The stadium was opened on September 16, 2000, when the first Western Mustangs home game was played.[11]

During the request for sponsorship funding, the Canadian-owned bank TD Canada Trust gave $1.5 million[12] towards the stadium construction. Originally named the TD Waterhouse Stadium,[13] the name was changed in 2013 to reflect new branding for TD[6] and then changed to its current name in 2021 after a donation of $1.4 million was given by the Alumni Association.[14]

In addition to the Western Mustangs, the stadium is also home to the London Beefeaters, who are part of the Canadian Junior Football League.[15]

In spring 2009, the newly formed FC London of the USL Premier Development League began playing their home games at this venue.

Facility

The stadium has a regulation CFL Canadian football sized field (110 yards by 65 yards) made out of FieldTurf. Surrounding the field is an 8-lane, 400-metre Mondo rubber track. The seating has two separate grandstands with a total capacity for 8,000. During large games, the stadium can accommodate 10,000 additional standing spectators.

In addition to the track, the facility also as multiple long jump sand pits, javelin and a discus circle.

The main building is known as the JW Little building and houses the players changing rooms, the Michael Kirkley Training Centre, coaching offices, as well as a lounge and terrace.

Renovations

In summer 2007, the AstroTurf was replaced by FieldTurf at a cost of approximately $1 million.

The stadium field and track underwent renovations in summer 2021 to replace the track surface and the artificial FieldTurf. Along with those playing surfaces, the stadium lights were upgraded to facilitate better visibility during night games.[16] The budgeted cost for this project was $4.6 million.[17]

Notable events

The stadium hosts a number of events outside of the university. Every year, local London public schools through the Thames Valley School Board use the facilities often to host track and field events.[18] The stadium also hosts local London high school football games known as Red Feather games, in which local senior high school football teams play their first game of the season.

The stadium was used as the main venue for the 2001 Canada Summer Games.[19]

In 2002, the stadium was used for an exhibition CFL game between the Toronto Argonauts and Hamilton Tiger-Cats[20] which was a sellout at 9,178 fans.

The stadium was the host of the 2004 Men's Pan American Cup for the men's international field hockey championship.[21]

In 2006, the stadium hosted the 2006 World Lacrosse Championship and the game attendance was 7,735.[22]

London hosted the 2010 Canadian Special Olympics and the stadium became one of a number of venues across the city.[23]

In the summer of 2018, the stadium was the main venue for the 2018 Ontario Summer Games.[24] The stadium is again the main venue for the 2021 Ontario Summer Games,[25] being held in London for the second time in a row.

External links

42.9999°N -81.2738°W

Notes and References

  1. News: Intini. John. Stadium receives backing. September 24, 1999. Western Gazette.
  2. Web site: JP Metras Sports Museum. www.lib.uwo.ca. 2020-03-02.
  3. News: Intini. John. Stadium receives backing. September 24, 1999. Western Gazette.
  4. News: Intini. John. Stadium receives backing. September 24, 1999. Western Gazette.
  5. News: Intini. John. Stadium receives backing. September 24, 1999. Western Gazette.
  6. Web site: Western University and TD announce new name for stadium . Media Relations . 2013-08-27. Western University . en-US. 2020-03-02.
  7. Web site: How does TD Stadium stack up?. Clarke. Charlie O'Connor. The Gazette • Western University's Student Newspaper. 14 September 2016 . en. 2020-03-02.
  8. Web site: TD Stadium. Western Mustangs Sports. en. 2020-03-02.
  9. News: Intini. John. Stadium receives backing. September 24, 1999. Western Gazette.
  10. Web site: JP Metras Sports Museum. www.lib.uwo.ca. 2020-03-02.
  11. WESTERN INDUCTS THIRD CLASS OF FOOTBALL GREATS - Ontario University Athletics (OUA). oua.ca. 5 May 2006 . 2020-03-02.
  12. News: MacCulloch, Nash look back at where careers got started. 2001-08-09. The Globe and Mail. en-CA. 2020-03-02.
  13. Web site: Western University's TD Waterhouse Stadium renamed . The London Free Press . 2013-08-27. en. https://web.archive.org/web/20180726135313/https://www.lfpress.com/2013/08/27/western-universitys-td-waterhouse-stadium-renamed/wcm/bf1320b5-a6b5-fa43-cd89-52a0e00dc256 . 26 July 2018.
  14. Web site: 2021-10-02. Western News - Western renames iconic stadium to Western Alumni Stadium. 2021-10-03. Western News. en-CA.
  15. Web site: LONDON BEEFEATERS 2019 SCHEDULE.
  16. Web site: Western upgrades football field, hockey arena in long-overdue makeover. 2021-09-11. lfpress. en-CA.
  17. Web site: Western University: 2021-22 Operating and Capital Budgets.
  18. Web site: Track & Field – Thames Valley Regional Athletics. en-US. 2020-03-02.
  19. Web site: Canada Games Council - Past Games. www.canadagames.ca. 2020-03-02.
  20. Web site: The Official Site of the Canadian Football League as powered by SLAM! Sports. 2002-10-20. https://web.archive.org/web/20021020045915/http://cfl.ca/CFLNews0204/15_cfl2.html. 2020-03-02. 2002-10-20.
  21. Web site: PAHF - 2nd Pan American Cup - Men. www.panamhockey.org. 2020-03-02.
  22. Web site: Activity Workshop - Lacrosse World Cup 2006 - Reports 22 July 2006. activityworkshop.net. 2020-03-02.
  23. Web site: Canadian Special Olympics to be hosted by London, Ont. in July 2010. 2009-04-10. CP24. en. 2020-03-02.
  24. Web site: 2018 Ontario Summer Games. 2017-10-06. Athletics Ontario. en-US. 2020-03-02.
  25. Web site: Ontario Summer Games postponed to 2021 due to COVID-19 London 2021 Ontario Summer Games. 2021-02-16. www.london2021.ca.