Revision as of 19:44, 19 April 2008 editKanabekobaton (talk | contribs)12,301 editsm Undid revision 206685958 by DarkAudit (talk)← Previous edit | Revision as of 20:31, 19 April 2008 edit undoDarkAudit (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Rollbackers17,362 editsm Reverted 1 edit by Kanabekobaton; It was an ARENA. The stadium was across the street.. using TWNext edit → | ||
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{{Infobox_Arena | | ||
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arena_name = Stansbury Hall| | ||
nickname = | | nickname = | | ||
image = ]| | image = ]| | ||
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architect = | | architect = | | ||
former_names = WVU Field House | | former_names = WVU Field House | | ||
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tenants = ] (]) (]-])| | ||
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seating_capacity = 6,000 | ||
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Revision as of 20:31, 19 April 2008
Stansbury Hall, named after Harry Stansbury (d. 1966), former WVU Athletic Director , is a building on the Downtown Campus of West Virginia University. Opened in 1929 as the WVU Field House, just to the southwest of "Old" Mountaineer Field, this was the home of WVU basketball until 1970, when the WVU Coliseum was opened. This was the home floor during the days of Hot Rod Hundley and Jerry West.
Today the building is the home of the English and Philosophy Departments, the Program for Humanities, the Program for Religious Studies, the Center for Writing Excellence, the Liberal Studies Program, and the WVU Writing Center. Army and Air Force ROTC programs are also housed here.