Archello Awards 2025: Open for Entries! Submit your best projects now.
Archello Awards 2025: Open for Entries!
Submit your best projects now.

Cary Leeds Center for Tennis & Learning

Cary Leeds Center for Tennis & Learning
Randy Rubin

Cary Leeds Center for Tennis & Learning

Through a public-private partnership between the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation and our not-for-profit client, New York Junior Tennis & Learning (NYJTL) as concessionaire, a new flagship tennis and education center was conceived as a year-round public amenity for Crotona Park, inside 127-acres of natural parkland in the South Bronx. The project expands the legacy of the twenty original public tennis courts and also transforms the site into a new state-of-the-art venue, comprised of a 12,750 SF two-story clubhouse and educational facility, with two world-class stadium exhibition courts; 20 outdoor hard courts, with 10 upgraded to USTA regulation and seasonal coverage under air structures; bleacher seating for 960; and a raised spectator viewing bridge in-between the courts.

 

As a hybrid facility, the two-story clubhouse includes a pro shop, lounge and expansive locker rooms found in a typical high-end tennis club, above classrooms, meeting spaces and garden areas associated with a community center. The building and stadium courts are partially buried as a strategy to minimize the impact of a large structure in the park, to take advantage of natural geothermal heating and cooling of below ground surfaces, and to create a special precinct for both "tennis and learning."

 

Bleacher seats are not visible from outside the precinct, preserving the 127-acre recreational setting of natural parkland in New York City’s public Crotona Park. To address issues of durability and maintenance of standard tournament asphalt courts, the courts now sunken below-grade were constructed with post-tensioned concrete exceeding USTA construction standards. Courtside, the lower level of the clubhouse opens directly on to the exhibition courts, and parkside, the building appears as a low single story building.

 

Conceptually, the venue is designed as a series of platforms—both for viewing tennis, from beginner to professional level, and metaphorically a platform to encourage afterschool learning—a project to create the opportunity for underserved kids to experience success on the tennis court as well as in life.

 

As a design strategy, the building was conceived as a series of roofs providing cover for simple, multiple-use interior spaces—a tectonic of shifting planes defines the roof, floors, and viewing platforms, anchored by solid volumes of the “locker box” and elevator cores. Located at the corner of the park site, the two-story clubhouse breaks from the orthogonal grid defined by the tennis courts.

 

The sequence from the park approach to the hubbub of clubhouse activity is carefully sheltered from the park approach with an understated single-story pavilion. Once inside the precinct, all attention is directed courtside. A raised bridge platform provides direct viewing to five conventional courts and additional viewing to the exhibition and stadium courts. Unobstructed elevated views of the park environment from this area provide an additional amenity by this program piece.

 

Material Used :
1. Northeast Precast (Precast Concrete)
2. Bethlehem Precast (Precast Concrete)
3. Musco Lighting (Stadium Lighting) 
4. Ebingers Iron Works (Architectural Metals)
5. Mod Tech (Heavy Lifting/Steel)
6. Irwin Seating (Stadium Seating)
7. FunderMax (Exterior Cladding)
8. Thompkins Bluestone (Bluestone Supply)

Project credits

Architectes
Sports & Tennis Design
Elevator
Lighting

Product spec sheet

Precast Concrete
Architectural Metals
Exterior Cladding
Stadium Seating
Stadium Lighting
Precast Concrete

Project data

Année du projet
2017
Partagez ou ajoutez Cary Leeds Center for Tennis & Learning à vos collections