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By Darcy
Gifford '91
The green scoreboard
is still affixed to the south wall. A handful of its light bulbs
are missing, and the color is worn to a lighter hue. The side
baskets are also still intact. Dust envelops the backboards, and
the rims are rusted brown. Yet these symbols endure, timeless
reminders of days past.
Ridge Gymnasium
is, after all, an old gym. A venerable "snake pit" during
its heyday, its sunken playing surface and cramped quarters -
with legions of frenzied fans leaning over a brick balcony less
than three feet away from the action - made for a distinct homecourt
advantage. Ridge was an intimidating "sixth man" for
the Bulldogs, invoking opponents' jitters and wobbly knees.
The scoreboard
buzzer wailed for the last time on Dec. 20, 1990. The historic
building, once dubbed a "Monument to the Depression,"
became a monument to progress, as teams packed their gear and
headed to the spacious Merillat Sport & Fitness Center. Ridge
has since served a myriad of functions, including a makeshift
entertainment venue in the early 1990s, complete with visiting
comedians and musicians.
Then, saddled
with a leaking roof and other functional inadequacies, Ridge closed
its doors. The heat was turned off, and the wooden playing surface,
which once hosted some of the most memorable moments in the College's
history, was littered with discarded furniture and bird excrement.
Sadly, it had become a monument to neglect.
Fast forward
to the present. Ridge is currently in the midst of yet another
metamorphosis. With the roof repaired and electrical and heating
issues addressed, it became the College's temporary library in
1999 as Shipman Library underwent an incredible renovation. The
old gym is now a student center, and today's students go to Ridge
to check their centrally located mailboxes or to use the 24-hour
computer lab.
Still, Ridge,
in its current state known simply as "phase one," is
far from the comprehensive student center that this campus thirsts
for. Steel grafting and half-formed walls give the interior an
industrial and incomplete look, as if the construction workers
went on a coffee break and forgot to come back. Its dark, eclectic
colors and cavernous atmosphere seem more suitable for a warehouse
rave than a dynamic campus hangout.
Thankfully, campus
leaders have a vision for Ridge. And why not? Structurally sound
and architecturally interesting, it is a fitting candidate for
renovation. It has an enduring quality, and perhaps no other building
on campus has a better story to tell. Ah, if those walls could
talk. Like sitting at the knee of a grandparent and listening
to stories of old, Ridge has seen it all. From a beginning marred
by dismal economics, to its birth as a burgeoning mecca of small
college athletics, Ridge has witnessed and withstood the test
of time.
Close your eyes
and envision the way it used to be. It's 1929, and fanfare surrounds
the campus as the cornerstone is laid in place. Or it's 1939,
and after 10 depression-riddled years, the building is finally
completed. Maybe in your mind it's the 1950s, and as an AC student
you play a fierce game of handball with President John Dawson
'38. Can you remember the late 1970s, and hearing the roar
of the crowd as the volleyball and women's basketball teams made
winning MIAA titles commonplace? Or maybe your point of reference
is the late 1980s, when you'd venture in there at midnight to
watch your buddies play floor hockey.
Everyone has
a memory of Ridge. Commencements. Theatre productions. Athletic
contests. Running laps on the concrete bleachers. Ridge is a common
thread for AC alumni, a harmonious blend of nostalgia and durability.
No building on campus is screaming louder for a makeover, and
when the resurgence is complete, Ridge will retain its rightful
place of pre-eminence. The interior architectural design calls
for intersecting levels and a mixture of spaces, highlighted by
an atrium and skyboxes modeled after suites at professional athletic
stadiums. It is a vision that the stonemasons who laid the cornerstone
in 1929 never would have imagined.
There's tranquility
about Ridge now; a grand building that has quietly waited its
turn for a renaissance. In the coming months, we will be hearing
more about the College's elaborate plans to resurrect Ridge. Perhaps
the plan will captivate and galvanize our alumni, transforming
the building so that a future generation of Adrian students can
add their own chapter to its storied history.
What better way to pay tribute
to a building that has meant so much to so many of us?
-Want to share your own Ridge
memories? Send your story or photo to Marsha Fielder, 110 S. Madison
St., Adrian, MI 49221 or mfielder@adrian.edu
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Update: This
story won a national contest. Read
about it in "Around the Mall" in the
Winter 2005 issue.

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