Lightning flashed, thunder crashed, and rain pounded Grounds late Thursday afternoon. The storm forced the proceedings, scheduled to begin at 5 p.m., to be relocated inside the George Welsh Indoor Practice Facility, but it didn’t spoil the occasion for those in attendance.
“This is a huge, huge day,” University of Virginia head football coach Tony Elliott said. “It’s a big day, and it’s a landmark day, actually, for the institution, for the athletic department, for the football program.”
In September 2018, UVA’s Board of Visitors approved a master plan that would transform the athletics precinct on North Grounds. Nearly four years later, UVA officials finally broke ground Thursday on one of the centerpieces of the project, a 90,000-square football operations center that’s scheduled to open in the spring of 2024.
The $80 million building will include locker rooms, strength and conditioning space, nutrition spaces, meeting rooms, coaches’ offices, video operations and sports medicine areas for treatment and recovery.
“Football has a special place at UVA, and now our football program will have a very special place to call home,” University President Jim Ryan, one of the speakers at the groundbreaking ceremony, said.