Jump to content

Thunderbird Stadium

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Thunderbird Stadium
T-Bird
Map
Full nameDavid Sidoo Field at Thunderbird Stadium
Location6288 Stadium Road
University Endowment Lands
Coordinates49°15′16″N 123°14′44″W / 49.2544°N 123.2455°W / 49.2544; -123.2455
OwnerUniversity of British Columbia
OperatorAthletic Department of the University of British Columbia
Capacity3,411 seats, 5,000 festival area, maximum 12,000 spectators.
SurfacePolyTan Turf
Construction
OpenedOctober 7, 1967
Construction cost$1,236,188
ArchitectVladimir Plavsic & Associates
Tenants
UBC Thunderbirds (U Sports) (1967–present)
Vancouver Nighthawks (MLU) (2013–2016)
Vancouver Whitecaps FC 2 (USL) (2015–2017)
Nautsa’mawt FC (L1BC) (2022-2023)

Thunderbird Stadium is an outdoor stadium on the University Endowment Lands in British Columbia, Canada. It is located west of Vancouver's city limits, and is primarily used for soccer and football by the UBC Thunderbirds. It seats 3,500 in the main grandstand, plus grass seating for about 5,000 people on the west side and ends of the stadium, and by using the surrounding grass embankment the facility can accommodate up to 12,000 spectators.[1]

The stadium was opened on October 7, 1967.[2] It features 12 80-foot-high concrete support towers, all topped with concrete thunderbird statues created by renowned First Nations artist Bill Reid.[3] Later renovations include the replacement of a few original benches with fold-down seating directly below the press box.

History

[edit]

Sports

[edit]

The facility is also used for Canadian Rugby international matches, and the B.C. High School Rugby Championships. In 2009, the stadium was used to host the Ireland national rugby union team playing against the Canada national rugby union team.[4]

Since 2006, the stadium has been used for Australian rules football matches, including the West Coast Challenge tournament, and in 2007 as the venue for Canada's international games against the United States and Japan which drew 2,500 spectators. In 2008, it became home to the Vancouver Cougars club.

In 2013, the Vancouver Nighthawks, a professional ultimate team competing in Major League Ultimate, became tenants of Thunderbird Stadium. A total of five home games were played at Thunderbird Stadium for both the team and the league's inaugural season. The team ceased operation when the Major League Ultimate (MLU) ceased all operations on December 21, 2016.[5]

From 2015–2017, the USL soccer team, Whitecaps FC 2 (part of the Vancouver Whitecaps FC) played their home games at the stadium.[6]

In June 2015, a Canadian Football League preseason game was to be held at the stadium on June 19, 2015, between the BC Lions and Edmonton Eskimos. This was due to Women's World Cup soccer being held at the Lions' usual home, BC Place.[7]

The highest attendance for a Thunderbirds game at the stadium came on September 17, 2017 when UBC played their annual homecoming game in front of 9,542 fans, the third-highest attendance for a Canada West football game in History [8]

Cultural events

[edit]

The facility was also used for cultural events and rock festivals. However, with the installation of artificial turf in 2010, concerts are no longer permitted.

Thunderbird Stadium hosted Ozzfest, Lilith Fair, Lollapalooza, Area: One Festival, Another Roadside Attraction, and the Arts County Fair. It also held individual concerts including "Midnight Oil/Hunters & Collectors/Art Bergmann" in 1991. From 1995 into the 2000s it was used for the Vans Warped Tour.[needs update] Up to 25,000 have attended individual concerts and/or festivals at the stadium.[vague]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Thunderbird Stadium". UBC Sport Facilities.
  2. ^ "Thunderbird Stadium". University of British Columbia Archives.
  3. ^ "The Ubyssey" (PDF). September 14, 1965. p. 8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-07-17 – via University of British Columbia Archives.
  4. ^ "Ireland". Irish Rugby. Archived from the original on 2009-04-28. Retrieved 2009-05-08.
  5. ^ Eisenhood, Charlie (21 December 2016). "BREAKING: Major League Ultimate Suspends Operations". Ultiworld.
  6. ^ "2015 WFC2 Schedule". WhitecapsFC.com. Retrieved May 26, 2015.
  7. ^ "Lions announce pre-season game (May 5th, 2015)". BCLions.com. Retrieved May 26, 2015.
  8. ^ "Bringing the heat: T-Birds crush Huskies 31-10 in front of Homecoming crowd".
[edit]