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Renovated Student Life Center offers more opportunities for students

Whether your idea of recreation is lifting weights, playing basketball, running, doing yoga, or playing darts, RIT’s Hale-Andrews Student Life Center (SLC) is accommodating more visitors than ever, thanks in part to recent renovations and additions.

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A male and female student lift an orange barbell together in a gym at RIT, smiling under a large tiger mascot mural. The phrase 'Re-rack equipment after use' is visible on the wall behind them.

Carlos Ortiz/RIT

Leo Filho, a second-year software engineer major from Crown Point, N.Y., offers weight training guidance to Grace Perna, a third-year biomedical sciences major from Clifton Park, N.Y. in a new fitness room in the Hale-Andrews Student Life Center.

This semester, two racquetball courts have been converted into fitness rooms. They provide spaces where clubs can meet, personal trainers can work with students, or classes in strength training and other specialized activities can be offered. The additions help ease some of the congestion in the Wiedman Fitness Center, a neighboring 16,000-square-foot multilevel gym and weight room.

A renovated elevated running track above the basketball courts opened in January. The rubber track, an eighth of a mile long, replaced the original track that opened with the building in 1992.

A golf simulator enables students to practice their drives, and a third pool table was added during spring break to accommodate a growing number of billiards players, some who start playing at 6 a.m.

Garrison Koch, a Ph.D. student from New York City, visits the pool tables nearly every day.

“We have a great group of players who play in a local league,” he said. “It’s a great stress reliever.”

The billiards equipment was checked out 4,000 times last year, but that doesn’t include a lot of players who bring their own equipment and set cameras up to film themselves, said David Stevens, director of the Center for Recreational Sports.

Stevens said the first week of classes this semester saw an all-time high of visits to the SLC, which has had more than 550,000 visits annually in the past two years. About 91 percent of the visits were from current students, with faculty, staff, and alumni being the other 9 percent. Students who visit the SLC do so an average of 38 times a year.

And he said the amount of time the visitors are spending inside is also increasing, from an average of 71 minutes in 2021 to 88 minutes this year.

“Once they come, they tend to also stay and socialize. That’s been our goal. We’re trying to create a community,” Stevens said.

The center is also home for numerous wellness classes – two classes are mandatory for most RIT undergraduates prior to graduation. Many students take more than two and participate in classes involving dancing, fitness, martial arts, outdoor education, and recreation.

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Two students jog on an indoor track at RIT, smiling and chatting as they run along the orange-and-gray lanes in a well-lit athletic facility.

Carlos Ortiz/RIT

Jasper Emus, left, a second-year global business management major from South Salem, N.Y., and John Dominianni, a third-year computing and information sciences student from Closter, N.J., jog on a new rubber track above the basketball courts in the Hale-Andrews Student Life Center.

To help make students feel more comfortable in the space, dart boards and games such as air hockey have been added to provide more variety for students interested in less rigorous activities.

“We want people to come from different backgrounds, with all body types and experiences,” Stevens said. “We want everyone to feel welcomed here.”

Jennifer Lewis, associate director of Recreational Facilities, said the changes were made from student feedback and suggestions.

“We asked members of several student organizations what would be a priority for them,” she said. The new spaces were designed to accommodate their requests and be utilized as much as possible.

“Our sports clubs and all the student organization clubs have the right to reserve this space,” she said. “This enables them to do group workouts together.”

The fitness rooms are also available for open use during the school year on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. for students to use for their functional training and strength training needs.

Some additions can even help lure passersby to explore the center. Vending machines offering healthy snacks are now positioned near the Quarter Mile, offering even those not using the facility to come in to grab a snack.

“Over the past couple of years, we’re busy all day, every day, especially evening hours,” Lewis said.

Another addition, done in conjunction with Residence Life, opened in the basement of Frances Baker Hall in the fall of 2022. A fitness room opened there with treadmills, elliptical machines, stationary bikes, a rowing machine, a few stationary weight machines, and a small dumbbell area.

“It’s connected to a studio where you could have a group of students practicing a small dance routine or connect to the TV to run a small fitness class,” Lewis said. Any RIT student can use the room, which is open 24/7, by entering with their ID.

The space in Baker Hall was used 18,000 times last year by 2,100 unique students. It’s on pace to see 22,000 visits this year.

“The room has been super popular as another alternative for students who didn’t feel comfortable coming into the big gym,” she said. “It can seem pretty intimidating for someone coming in brand new to working out or being in such a big school. And since it’s cold in the winter, you may not feel like trekking across campus, so you have the convenience of staying right inside the dorms and using the tunnels.”

Lewis said the facilities and recreational options are not only used by current students, they are selling points to prospective students and appreciated by alumni.

“Students come back after they graduated and say RIT had they best gym they ever belonged to. They miss it,” Lewis said.

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