A different view of Commencement

The new football practice fields will be visible during this year’s ceremony

The walk down Campanile Hill for commencement will look quite different this year.

As graduates enter the stadium, they will see the new Anderson Family Football Complex on their left and the new football practice fields, complete with bright yellow field goal posts, on the right.

A chain-link fence currently blocks a portion of the traditional commencement walkway from the Campanile to Memorial Stadium. The fence encloses the construction site of the $31-million complex, which is scheduled to be completed in July.

Inside the fence, bare soil surrounds the cement walkway. This is where crews dug up ground during construction.

Rachel Ulrich, Lousiburg senior said she was disappointed with how the hill looked.

“It looks really bad,” Ulrich said. “I especially don’t like the mud. It’s going to be hard to make it down the hill in heels if the mud gets onto the sidewalk.”

According to associate athletics director Jim Marchiony, by the time of commencement the fence will be gone.

“The hill will be re-sodded by then, and the sidewalks will be back in place,” Marchiony said. He also said that the fence would be removed by commencement, allowing the graduates to take the traditional walk down the hill.

“It will look very good for graduation, and nothing should prevent it from being a good ceremony.”

Allison Green, Manhattan senior, said she overheard a couple students who said they wouldn’t walk down the hill for commencement because they didn’t like how it looked. Green said that she would be there, and thought that the new complex would just require some time to get used to.

“The stadium is gray and silver, and the complex looks like sandstone,” Green said.

Green said that when the complex was in earlier stages of construction, it looked “awful,” but she was glad that the area was looking better.

“As soon as they get the fence and the tractors out of the way, it should be fine,” Green said.

In February 2007, Warren Corman, University architect, told The University Daily Kansan that the complex was designed to fit in with the rest of campus and not to be a distraction during activities like commencement and football tailgating.

­—Edited by Nick Mangiaracina

 

Related articles

Graduation traditions have long history

From the procession to walking through the Campanile, commencement dates back more ...

/news/2009/apr/21/graduation_traditions/

Journey ends, begins on hill

/news/2005/may/20/features_graduation_journey/

Game day goes smoothly despite construction

The Athletics Department said navigating construction was not a problem for most ...

/news/2007/sep/04/construction/

In search of a parking space

Construction near Memorial Stadium is forcing students to park elsewhere at the ...

/news/2007/aug/13/construction/

Plans released for football complex

The 80,000 square foot complex will be the new home for the ...

/news/2007/feb/26/facility/

Sewer improvements shut down parking lot

Construction at a parking lot near Memorial Stadium will close the lot ...

/news/2007/feb/23/sewer_improvements_shut_down_parking_lot/

Traditions night preview

Hawk Week allows new students to learn KU traditions.

/news/2010/aug/07/traditions-night-preview/

Athletes walk down the hill

More than 90 student-athletes graduated Sunday.

/news/2010/may/17/athletes-walk-down-hill/

‘Green space’ on campus is endangered

Marvin Grove, other natural icons at the University threatened because of weather, ...

/news/2009/nov/19/green-space-campus/

University celebrates 139th commencement

Graduates celebrated with the traditional walk down Campanile Hill.

/news/2011/may/22/university-celebrates-139th-commencement/

Fans keep tailgating despite construction

The construction of the new Anderson Family Football Complex has caused some ...

/news/2007/oct/31/tailgating/

Students carry banners at commencement

Faculty and staff selected the students based on their involvement in academics ...

/news/2009/may/06/banners_commencement/

Students spill about Campanile myths

Legend says that students will not graduate if they walk through the ...

/news/2010/may/05/students-spill-about-campanile-myths/

Football complex goes green with grass roof

The Athletics Department kept the beauty of Campanile Hill by building a ...

/news/2008/jul/08/roof/

Football hopes to create new tradition

A new, large Jayhawk statue will greet players as they make their ...

/news/2011/sep/06/football-hopes-create-new-tradition/

Gridiron Club struggles to meet financial goal

Construction cannot begin until the $34 million goal is reached.

/news/2010/jan/25/gridiron-club-struggles-meet-financial-goal/

Fans face game day construction

Changes to parking and tailgating will affect pregame activities before Saturday’s season ...

/news/2007/aug/30/parking/

Hartz: Campus construction a major bummer

Missed completion dates and destruction of parking areas make campus renovations unworth ...

/news/2007/aug/17/Hartz/

Earles: Complaints about parking growing louder

The Athletics Department gets what it wants without any consequences.

/news/2008/mar/04/earles/

Get to know your game day

Learn some of the rituals associated with KU football and its long ...

/news/2009/sep/04/get_know_your_gameday/

Mass. Street hosts football block party

Fans turned out downtown for the event and Coach Gill’s first episode ...

/news/2010/sep/02/mass-street-hosts-football-block-party/

A band built on tradition

The Marching Jayhawks continue to impress by carrying on decades-old routines

/news/2009/oct/29/band-built-tradition/

Stadium, Fieldhouse get updates

The football field and the athletic complex will both see many changes ...

/news/2009/aug/25/stadium/

Athletics department proposes new facility

The Olympic Village will combine soccer, softball and track into one complex.

/news/2009/mar/26/new_facility/

Fans get sneak peek of football practice

The football team’s new practice fields offer passers-by a view of the ...

/news/2008/aug/21/ne_practice/

Athletics department to install new scoreboard

/news/2005/aug/19/new_scoreboard/

Abnormal arms, but ample ability

How one student aims to transform disability's definition.

/news/2010/apr/15/abnormal-arms-ample-ability/

Football facility architect reportedly selected

/news/2006/jan/31/football_facility/

Stadium’s new complex eats up student parking

Construction of the new Anderson Family Complex south of Memorial Stadium has ...

/news/2008/feb/26/stadiums_new_complex/

Schools share similar traditions

Despite distance and rivalry, KU and Mizzou have corresponding icons and rituals.

/news/2009/nov/17/schools-share-similar-traditions/

Roesler: Memorial Stadium needs upgrade

Expansion is essential to rival the home-court advantage of other Big 12 ...

/news/2010/apr/28/roesler-memorial-stadium/

Faith, Fellowship and Football

Stuckey leads no matter the path.

/news/2009/mar/10/stuckey_faithfootball/

Upgrades shift to basketball, volleyball

Coaches and players are still excited about ongoing construction and upgrades to ...

/news/2008/aug/29/BB_practice_facility/

Donors spruce up Danforth Chapel

The Linda Stewart family helped put together renovations to provide a brides ...

/news/2007/sep/21/danforth/

CLAS departments have own ceremonies

/news/2005/may/20/features_graduation_clas/

A view from the top

Playing KU's tallest instrument inside the campanile

/news/2008/feb/28/view_top/

Gridiron Club expansion still on track

Despite Coach Mark Mangino's departure and the six-game losing streak, plans for ...

/news/2009/dec/03/gridiron-club/

Local bars now building patios

The city commission recently approved a new patio for the Jackpot Music ...

/news/2009/jun/20/patios/

Campanile bells to wedding bells

Some students choose to walk down the aisle before or soon after ...

/news/2010/may/05/campanile-bells-wedding-bells/

Gill wins recruits the right way

The head coach's genuine character is the perfect complement to his plan ...

/news/2010/mar/09/gill-wins/

Comments

Graduation will never be the same.

Thank you KU athletics, for spoiling our beautiful campus, taking away parking spots and making getting to class inconvenient, all for a football training facility we don't need.

Sign in to comment