Ross-Ade, Remade
World War I had just ended. An energetic alumnus and accomplished
inventor named David Ross was out raising money to help build the Purdue
Memorial Union. Although most alumni he contacted would see him, most
declined to support the project, even though they knew from their college
days that the university lacked a place to hold dances and for students to
gather informally.
Why the disdain for helping alma mater? According to the book David
Ross: Modern Pioneer, Ross was told repeatedly by successful alumni: "Give
us a winning football team, for a change, and then we'll think about
contributing money to Purdue. We're tired of being made fun of by alumni of
other big colleges during the football season."
Since 1892, the Purdue eleven had played on Stuart Field, a modest
athletic complex located just east of the current Armory on campus. Purdue
had reached the pinnacle of football glory in the mid-1890s by capturing
four consecutive Indiana Intercollegiate Athletic Association crowns. Since
the advent of the Western Conference - later the Big Nine and Big Ten -
Boilermaker football fortunes had leveled off and were in a state of
decline.
Ross, a member of the Class of 1893, came away from his fund-raising
forays convinced that a new stadium would attract better talent, both in
terms of coaches and players. Success on the field would follow. So he
turned his attention to the state of Purdue athletics facilities. He teamed
with George Ade of the Class of 1887, and the pair bought a 65-acre farm
north of campus. With the help of dozens of alumni and others, Ross-Ade
Stadium was completed in time for Homecoming 1924. In the dedication game,
Purdue prevailed 26-7 over Indiana.
On the matter of whether superior facilities would fuel success on
the field, Ross was right. Five years after the stadium that bears his name
was dedicated, the Boilermakers were celebrating their first outright Big
Ten championship.
Although a football renaissance has been under way since Joe
Tiller's first season as head coach in 1997, that rebirth is getting a $70
million boost in the form of a renovation of the stadium inside and out. It
is the first comprehensive upgrade since ground was broken nearly 80 years
ago.
The stadium started out with a capacity of 13,500 on the east and
west sides and space for another 5,000 to stand in the north bend.
For six decades, Ross-Ade gradually grew in capacity to 69,000. The
first addition was the completion of standing-room space in the north bend
of the stadium in 1930. Originally a tiered hillside, the closed end of the
stadium was finished with concrete to add 5,000 seats.
In the 1940s and 1950s, permanent grandstands went in on the east
and west sides. Among the last expansions was in 1963, when the field was
excavated to make room for 13 more rows below the original seats.
Although the capacity of the stadium increased over the decades, the
footprint remained the same. Fans became accustomed to a cramped concourse,
to getting to the stadium early to avoid the crowds and inevitable
bottlenecks. Those who waited until close to kickoff would be fortunate to
see a few minutes of the first quarter.
All of that has changed with the remade Ross-Ade. Work on the
three-year project began in 2001 with the relocation of Beering Drive, the
road that flanked the stadium to the west. After the conclusion of the 2001
home season, delayed two weeks by the postponement of the Sept. 15 Notre
Dame game to Dec. 1 as a result of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, work
began in earnest. The 1950s-era press box was demolished, and by early 2002,
steel framework was being erected for the Pavilion on the west side of the
stadium, an enduring architectural exclamation point.
In the old Woodworth Memorial Press Box, reporters and announcers
who covered the Boilermakers were spread over three of the four levels of
the structure. Network announcers occupied the second level, and print
reporters watched the game from the third floor. Atop the press box, in
structures that served their purpose but resembled ice-fishing shanties,
radio play-by-play announcers and color commentators chronicled the exploits
of the Boilermakers.
In the new four-story Pavilion, all media occupy the Shively Media
Center on the fourth level. A photo deck above the fourth level affords a
sweeping view of campus and a bird's-eye view of the action on the field.
On the lower levels of the Pavilion, fans who purchase seat licenses
and suite licenses enjoy a unique experience unimagined by Ross. In 2002, 34
suites and a 200-seat indoor club were unveiled. This past summer, outdoor
club seating was completed. Fans in those seats enjoy an elevated view of
the field, as well as access to the Shively Stadium Club.
A grand staircase at the southeast corner of Ross-Ade is sure to
become an architectural signature for the venerable home of the
Boilermakers. Beneath the stairs, a tunnel dedicated to the victims of the
1903 "football special" train wreck will welcome the football team into the
stadium.
Less striking but every bit as integral to the renovation was the
replacement of concrete throughout the stadium, as well as all new bench
seating throughout. A new sound system was added in 2002. The crowning touch
is the red-brick exterior on the new concourse buildings, a unifying element
with Cary Quadrangle to the south and the rest of the red-brick West
Lafayette campus.
Expanded seat widths and other changes in the stadium will reduce
seating capacity to 62,500 beginning with the 2003 season. It was 67,332
prior to the renovation and was 66,295 for 2002.
Somewhere, David Ross is smiling.