Hamel Recreation Center
Former names | Snively Arena (1965-1995) |
---|---|
Location | 5 Edgewood Rd. Durham, New Hampshire 03824 |
Coordinates | 43°8′26″N 70°55′53″W / 43.14056°N 70.93139°W |
Owner | University of New Hampshire |
Operator | University of New Hampshire |
Surface | multiple |
Opened | 1965 (58–59 years ago) |
Tenants | |
New Hampshire Wildcats ice hockey (1965-1995) |
The Hamel Recreation Center (formerly the Snively Arena) is an indoor multipurpose facility located in Durham, New Hampshire, United States. It was the home of the New Hampshire varsity ice hockey team from 1965 to 1995. It is currently used by UNH as a recreation building for students and faculty and possesses basketball, squash and racquetball courts, a cycling studio, and a sauna, among several other facilities.[1]
History
The Snively arena was completed in 1965 and dedicated in honor of A. Barr Snively, a long-time coach at Brown University, Williams College, and UNH who had died from a heart attack the year before.[2] Initially the arena's main purpose was to house the men's ice hockey team, which had been using an outdoor artificial ice rink for the preceding ten years.[3] The arena allowed UNH to rejoin ECAC Hockey, which it had been forced to leave in 1964, and return its program to the top echelon of college hockey.
The arena was the home of the ice hockey team for 30 years before being replaced by the Whittemore Center in 1995. After the hockey team moved out, the arena was renovated, expanded and renamed to become the Hamel Recreation Center, in honor of university benefactor Dana Hamel.[4] The building was further expanded in 2016 to include an indoor pool.
References
- ^ "Hamel Recreation Center". University of New Hampshire. Retrieved May 7, 2019.
- ^ "A. Barr Snively, Former Williams Grid Coach, 65". North Adams Transcript. 1964-04-16.
- ^ "Wildcat Hockey: Ice Hockey at the University of New Hampshire". New Hampshire Wildcats. October 2002. ISBN 9780738511023. Retrieved 2017-06-06.
- ^ "Athletic Facilities". University of New Hampshire. Retrieved May 7, 2019.