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Just Doing ItUM takes a giant leap from the Schreiber Gym to a new recreation center.by Courtney Lowery
It’s a dreary March day in Missoula. Outside, rain ... or is it snow ...? is joining an inch of snow on the ground. But sweat is dripping off the chin of the girl next to me. Being on a treadmill today isn’t so bad, especially when I can watch the Clark Fork River bend beneath the Higgins Avenue bridge and see the valley’s mountains stretching out to frame a background. Normally, treadmills make me feel like a test rat going around and around on a wheel. But on a day like this, in a facility like UM’s new Fitness and Recreation Center, a treadmill sure beats frostbite. Even the stair-stepper seems easier. It could be the state-of-the-art machine (like all the other equipment in the building), and it could be the view and the light coming in the panoramic windows, but I think it may be the $81 out of my pocket that is making me feel a bit lighter. Taking a gander around the building—the architecture a pleasing contrast of warm stone floors and cool steel structure, the high-tech equipment, a comfy little juice bar, sauna rooms, the distinct lack of a locker-room stench—I decide I’m just fine without the $81 spent this semester on rec center fees. Construction of the 79,000 square foot facility began in June of 2000 after students voted to increase their student activity fee to $81 from $16. The center was expected to open for the 2001 fall semester, but construction setbacks and the September 11 tragedy pushed the full opening to January 2002. Campus Recreation tried to meet the demand, opening parts of the center in late October, while the campus community applied ongoing pressure to fling open all the doors. The Associated Students of UM even passed a resolution urging the administration to refund fees to students who paid but were not able to use the center in its entirety.
I walk to the third floor and ask a few students to show me around. “You gotta see this,” they tell me with a gleam in their eyes. It feels like I’m on a tour of someone’s new home. The third floor houses the Cybex machines, the spin bicycles, a cushioned track hanging over the basketball courts, a family of stationary bikes, a few elliptical machines, a handful of Stairmasters, and two treadmills. It’s here you’ll find the puffed up chests in cut-off T-shirts hefting the brushed steel, art-deco looking free weights, the popular spin classes, and people like me, hoping for spring, but being perfectly content on a treadmill because of the light streaming through the windows.
When UM’s Campus Recreation started drafting plans for the building, the rock gym was a priority. Given the space they had to work with, the climbing wall is superb. It doesn’t compare with a few other facilities in town, but it’s great for classes and climbers on the fly.
“We were so inadequately equipped to serve a campus this big,” says Sonya Tysk, manager of fitness programs, from her office, peering out into the third floor full of bustling fitness nut
Tysk points out that the building has done more for Campus Rec than just supply more space and less stench. When the initial plans for the center were being drafted, Dudley Improta, assistant director of programming, says the deal was that Campus Rec would have to “step up their game” through expanding programs and services. Programming, including fitness classes, has taken a huge leap. Students now can take classes ranging from the popular spinning classes to tai chi, two kinds of yoga to kick boxing, and even a “muscle of the month” workout. With all of this “step-up,” the rec center also had to add staff. Campus Rec is now one of the top three student employers on campus. “You can have a bunch of machines, but without the staff and the programs, you have nothing,” Tysk says. And all of this—new facility, new equipment, better programming, expanded outdoor equipment rental, and increased staff available for fitness coaching and consultations—has produced precisely what Campus Rec wanted—more people. It has created a new gym culture of sorts, says senior Casey Ruggiero. As she walks through the third floor, she greets almost every passer-by. When you keep coming at the same time, she says, you start to develop a relationship with people you work out with. It helps with motivation, she says, because if you aren’t there one day, someone is asking why you weren’t.
Outside the rock gym, Cassie Ammen, a Loyola High School junior, is unlacing her climbing shoes. She joined when her sister, a UM student, sponsored a membership for her. She’s been climbing for a year and a half and says she comes to use the climbing wall because of the great boulder cave. It’s hard to find a quiet moment in the gym, especially during the day. I walk from the climbing wall to the gleaming stone floor of the entrance foyer that opens overhead to the third floor, feel the buzz of exercise machines, hear the thump of basketballs, smell the froth of fruit juices and espresso, and know I’m in another world. “Just don’t come at 5 p.m.” Ruggiero says, laughing. “It feels like you’re walking through the mall. There’s more make-up than sweat here at 5 p.m.”
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