The Ray Lavietes Basketball Pavilion at the Briggs Athletic Center
is a 2,195-seat multi-purpose arena in the Allston neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts. It is home to the Harvard University Crimson basketball team. It is tied with the University of Oregon's McArthur Court as the second-oldest college basketball arena still in use (Fordham University's Rose Hill Gym (1924) is the oldest.)
Originally known as the Briggs Athletic Center, it was originally named for LeBaron Russell Briggs, dean of Harvard College 1891-02 and the school's athletic director for 17 years. Briggs also served as president of the NCAA. It included an indoor track and batting cages, which were popular with local collegiate and professional baseball players (including, among others, Ted Williams). In 1981, the Gordon Track and Tennis Center Center (located adjacent to Harvard Stadium and the Bright Hockey Center) opened, and the building was refurbished as the new home to the Harvard basketball program, replacing the Malkin Athletic Center in Cambridge. The women's first game in the building was on November 26, 1982 against Chicago, and the men's was a day later against neighbor and rival MIT. In March 1996, the building was rededicated to Ray Lavietes '36, a two-time basketball letterman who made a $2.1 million contribution to a second refurbishing project in 1995 and 1996.
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LAVIETES PAVILION TICKETS
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The Ray Lavietes Basketball Pavilion at the Briggs Athletic Center
is a 2,195-seat multi-purpose
arena in the Allston neighborhood of
Boston, Massachusetts. It is home to the
Harvard University Crimson
basketball team. It is tied with the
University of Oregon's
McArthur Court as the second-oldest college basketball arena still in use (
Fordham University's
Rose Hill Gym (1924) is the oldest.)
Originally known as the Briggs Athletic Center, it was originally named for LeBaron Russell Briggs, dean of Harvard College 1891-02 and the school's athletic director for 17 years. Briggs also served as president of the
NCAA. It included an indoor track and batting cages, which were popular with local collegiate and professional baseball players (including, among others,
Ted Williams). In 1981, the Gordon Track and Tennis Center Center (located adjacent to
Harvard Stadium and the
Bright Hockey Center) opened, and the building was refurbished as the new home to the Harvard basketball program, replacing the
Malkin Athletic Center in
Cambridge. The women's first game in the building was on November 26, 1982 against
Chicago, and the men's was a day later against neighbor and rival
MIT. In March 1996, the building was rededicated to Ray Lavietes '36, a two-time basketball letterman who made a $2.1 million contribution to a second refurbishing project in 1995 and 1996.