| 
 The
                FacilityREGGIE LEWIS TRACK & ATHLETIC FACILITYBy Steve Vaitones
                 It was a long time coming but fulfillment of
                decades of dreams when the $17 million Reggie Lewis
                Track & Athletic Facility opened its doors in
                July 1995. The building, officially opened and
                dedicated on November 5, 1995, is named for the
                late Boston Celtics star Reggie Lewis, a graduate
                of Boston's Northeastern University and a popular
                community contributor. Discussion and planning of a state owned and
                constructed track facility began in 1958 after the
                demolition of Boston's East Newton Street Armory,
                but years of politics and questions over site and
                structure were not put to rest until groundbreaking
                on the campus of Roxbury Community College in
                October 1993. Much credit must be given to the late
                Bob McIntyre, a founder of the Massachusetts Track
                Coaches Association in 1955, who took part in the
                original planning and saw the project through all
                the years of hopes and setbacks. Though a gymnasium, fitness center, exercise
                studios, and seminar rooms are included in the
                complex, they were all built around the
                state-of-the-art track. Viewing the venue from the
                second floor meeting room observation windows and
                the foyer balcony across from the State High School
                Coaches Association office, one marvels at the
                site.  Six lanes of alternating light and dark blue
                Mondo cover the wood based 200 meter track.
                Permanently banked at a comfortable 24" at lane
                six, the track is suitable for both regular
                training and all levels of racing. It has proven to
                be lightning fast. The oval surrounds an eight lane
                sprint straightaway, and an additional five
                practice sprint lanes are available when the
                homestretch grandstands are rolled back.
 Mondo stretches from wall to wall, serving as
                runways for all jumps and the landing area for the
                one permanent and several portable throwing
                circles. Conduit carries all necessary computer and
                timing cables under the floor, eliminating clutter.
                The building is wired for both a networked on-line
                clerking and check-in computer system, as well as
                for a FinishLynx automatic timing system. All of
                this is surrounded by 3000 seats and covered by a
                sky-lit roof providing plenty of natural light.   Built
              as a "schoolboy" track facility (remember, it was first
              conceived in 1958), the Reggie Lewis Facility gives a permanent
              home to the city and state scholastic programs. Scheduling and policy
              continue to be fine-tuned. Boston schools finally have a permanent
              practice and competitive home as they run every weekday afternoon,
              and other groups come in almost every evening. Major scholastic
              meets previously scattered to local colleges, from Freshman/ Sophomore
              meets to all-state and New England titles, fill the weekend schedule
              from late December through early March. Community and club practice
              time fills in available open slots. Major events have been gravitating
              to the facility since it opened. The National Scholastic Meet was
              held here for three years as a showcase of high school talent from
              around the country, and produced numerous scholastic best performances.
              The USATF National Masters Indoor Championships will be conducted
              here for the eighth year in a row with nearly 200 world and US masters
              records recorded here at "Reggie". Stepping up yet another few notches, the NCAA Division II National
              Indoor Meet, hosted by the ECAC, has settled in as a fixture on
              the second weekend in March since 1999. The adidas Boston Indoor
              Games, part of USATF's Golden Spike Tour, has likewise found a home
              where the nation's and world's elite can showcase talents; many
              USA and World Records have come from this meet, arguably among the
              nation's top indoor meets.  The "crowning jewel" for the facility, though, is the
              arrival of the USA National Indoor Championships for a two year
              stay in 2003 and 2004. The meet serves as the USA selection meet
              for the IAAF World Indoor Championships for both years, and having
              the best in the US visit the facility contributes to the growth
              of the sport in Boston, in Massachusetts, and in New England. Built first and foremost for track, the Reggie Lewis facility provides
              a facility unrivaled nationwide for scholastic activities, and will
              contribute to the growth of the sport in Boston, in Massachusetts,
              and in New England. |