Swimming

Texas Aquatic Center Loses Beloved Tree to Football Facility Expansion

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By Ruth Beadle on SwimSwam

underwater swimming

How often do we think of the place we practice? 

We train in the same building everyday, staring at the black line that is the same at every single competition pool in the world. Instead of thinking about the beams on the ceiling or the exact color of twilight, we are imagining goals of the future or thinking about a joke our teammates said. 

The places we swim are like our roots, the unnoticed pillar that fosters our ability to grow. Through changes in coaches and teammates, the facility sits out with us through injuries, stands over us in the dark while waiting to get picked up, and stands tall over our killer sets. 

When the places we practice change, we lose a piece of our roots, our history. The University of Texas community is currently facing losing pieces of its history.

UT Austin is breaking ground on a new football practice facility in early 2024, relocating an iconic Longhorn swimming landmark outside of the Lee and Joe Jamail Texas Swim Center. The iconic tree that is outside the training facility has shaded decades of swimmers from hot Texas sun and winter rain storms.

A Place of History

For former swimmer Sarah Harlow Pooler, the tree was the site of the life changing news: there would be no 1980 Olympics for Americans. Pooler always starts the story with “under a large Texas live oak tree.” 

“On March 21, 1980, the ‘80 Olympic swim coach sat us under this live oak next to the UT Swim Center to tell us the Moscow games were being boycotted. (At 16, I’d qualified for the OT’s in 100 butterfly.) It was a pivotal moment in my life. The oak is being moved for a new Texas football training facility. I will be there in August to watch our son and CSU football play Texas but in the meantime, I’m rooting for the tree and hope she makes it.”

Several would-be 1980 Olympic participants, including Rick Carey, Kris Kirchner, William Paulus, Kim Linehan, Mary Jo Pennington, Jill Sterkel, and Susie Thayer, were Texas Longhorns.

The University of Texas has a history of moving historical trees, with a 93% survival rate for 55 trees transplanted over 15 years. 

Remember that gigantic oak tree next to the Lee and Joe Jamail Texas Swimming Center? The University of Texas at Austin…

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The new football facility will not externally change much else to the pool due to local and state laws protecting the facility’s terrace view from obstruction due to the view of the State Capitol building. 

However, the tree outside the Texas Swim Center is not the only landmark that will be changed as a result of this training facility. 

Lost History

The building that will be destroyed because of the expansion is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, as the now School of Social Work Building was the site of Austin’s first  integrated junior high. The group Save the Past for the Future is arguing for the preservation of the building due to negative cultural, artistic, architectural, and environmental ramifications.

In particular, a three-floor mural made by top Austin muralist Raul Valdez will be destroyed. Valdez interviewed students and worked with local elementary students in the creation of the mural. 

As of now, plans are going ahead to continue the removal of the building and the oak trees in the surrounding area. The loss of historical space will create a new football practice facility which will be an important home to the athletes.

Does loosing our roots offer room for new trees to grow? 

SwimSwam: Texas Aquatic Center Loses Beloved Tree to Football Facility Expansion

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