LU announces Williams Stadium, Vines Center improvements
Illustration courtesy of Liberty University
As part of a $22 million expansion, Williams Stadium’s seating will expand from 12,000 to 30,000.
When Danny Rocco took over as Liberty University’s head football coach in December 2005, the facilities were threadbare.
The stadium featured rock-hard AstroTurf. The Williams Football Operations Center was still a muddy hole in the ground at the north end of the stadium. An expansion of Williams Stadium? Not necessary for a program that averaged 5,752 fans per game during a dismal 1-10 season.
In less than four years, the atmosphere around the school’s football program has changed completely. The Flames routinely sell out games. The 10 highest-attended games in LU history have occurred during the Rocco era, and four times, the Flames have drawn more than 15,000 fans, well above the stadium’s 12,000-seat official capacity.
The Flames, LU chancellor Jerry Falwell Jr. reasoned, had outgrown their modest digs. Friday morning at the school’s convocation service in the Vines Center, Falwell announced plans to expand Williams Stadium to 30,000 seats, and the Vines Center by 3,000 seats, for athletic events.
“I know (the late Rev. Dr. Jerry) Falwell envisioned this,” Rocco said. “When I came down here to meet Dr. Falwell, he was selling me on the vision of athletics and of football. I bought into what he was saying. I really believed this could happen if the right pieces were in place. … To look back at three short years and see how far we have come, it’s very humbling.”
Undoubtedly, the success of the football program in recent seasons was a catalyst for the $22 million stadium project. In each of Rocco’s three seasons at Liberty, the school has reset its season attendance record.
The Flames drew 92,026 fans for seven home dates last season, an average of 13,146 per game. In 2005, Ken Karcher’s final year as LU’s coach, the Flames drew 34,512 for six games. Liberty set a school record with 10 victories last year and won its second straight Big South Conference championship.
With that success has come increased interest, not only from the student body, but the Lynchburg community as a whole. Season tickets sales have increased from 135 in 2005 to roughly 2,500 this season, LU athletics director Jeff Barber said.
The three-phase football stadium expansion will begin later this year, after the Flames’ Nov. 7 home finale against VMI. Already, the school had a new FieldTurf playing surface installed in 2006. That surface was replaced last spring by the manufacturer after some issues arose with the original turf.
Currently, a new scoreboard and high-definition video board is being installed at the north end of the stadium, and it will be ready for use for Liberty’s Sept. 12 home opener against North Carolina Central.
By the start of the 2010 home schedule, Williams Stadium will feature a new three-level, $750,000 building that will span the stadium’s two 10-yard lines. The facility will host the press box, coaches boxes, television booths, permanent suites and a 1,000-person capacity classroom.
The first expansion phase also calls for seating to be installed all the way to the end zones on the lower level, bringing the stadium’s capacity to 19,200.
Phase two will feature an upper deck of seating on the student side of the stands, pushing the capacity to 23,200. The final phase will bring the planned horseshoe stadium to 30,000, as the stands will be expanded all around the south end zone and connect with both sides of current seating. The building at the south end of the stadium, which houses the visitor’s locker room, Liberty’s wrestling practice facility and its track and field locker rooms, will remain underneath the new seating.
Barber, who called the project “a monumental commitment,” said the full expansion should be complete within five years, provided the school succeeds in its ambitious fundraising efforts.
Rosser International, an Atlanta architectural firm that designed the Georgia Dome, North Carolina’s Dean Smith Center and Atlanta’s Turner Field, is in charge of the project.
The only school in the Football Championship Subdivision with a larger on-campus facility is Pennsylvania, which plays at 52,593-seat Franklin Field in Philadelphia. Dick Price Stadium, on Norfolk State’s campus, also seats 30,000.
The stadium expansion would also put Liberty in line with stadium-size regulations to play in the Football Bowl Subdivision, which includes state schools Virginia and Virginia Tech. Barber emphasized, though, that the stadium expansion plans were not made with a jump to the FBS in mind.
“We just want to be the best program in the Big South,” Barber said. “If something changes down the road, I don’t know. But we’re not trying to do this with that in mind. We want to be the best Big South team, the best FCS program. Where it takes us, we’ll just have to wait and see.”
The Vines Center expansion is being done with convocation in mind as much as basketball. With nearly 12,000 students on campus, the Vines was filled to capacity Friday. Falwell said some students had to watch the convocation service in another room on campus because there was no more room at the Vines Center.
The Vines currently seats 8,000 for athletics events and will expand to 11,000 with the addition of three upper-deck balconies. For convocation, the capacity will be 12,000.
That project is expected to be complete in the next five to 10 years, and will include a major renovation of the outside of the building. Already inside, the women’s basketball and volleyball locker rooms are undergoing extensive facelifts.
In all, Falwell said, Liberty has spent $70 million in the past two years on campus capital improvements.
“Now,” he said. “We felt like it was time to upgrade our athletics facilities.”

The Vines Center will gain a 3,000-seat balcony (shown in red).

The Vines Center will also have a brick façade and more columns.
Illustrations courtesy of Liberty University
Reader Reactions
I just feel all warm and fuzzy! LU, Christ would be so proud!
I think this is good news, for LU and the Lynchburg area. I’d be happy for the area and the institution regardless of whether it’s LU, LC, RC, SBC, or CVCC. I was rather disappointed LC decided against restoring its football team.
The only point that I want to make is that LU will seriously need to consider how to improve parking. For some reason, they are discriminatory towards adequate parking. Who else builds a 9,000 seat basketball arena with no parking? Who else decides to build a bookstore in its best parking lot for a 12,000 seat football stadium.
I hope they consider building some parking decks and bulldozing some of the trailor park dorms on dorm circle in favor of adequate parking for the Vines Center.
I think UVa is being a little loose with the facts. U Wisconsin built there new basketball arena—larger than JPJ, with donations and ticket revenues. No state funds.
navigator73—To answer your question, think ultimate Ponzi scheme, with “God” in the Bernie Madoff role.
Gibson- While donors do have a lot to do with funding athletics at public institutions, you are not correct in the comparison between private schools (LU) and public, such as UVa. This was extracted directly from the JPJ website: “The John Paul Jones Arena is the first facility in the country built by a public university almost entirely from private funds.“ Obviously, the statement insinuates that prior to this, most facilities had a good deal of funding from their state.
Public tax dollars are not used in funding athletics at public universities. Like LU, sports at places like UVa and Tech are funded by donors and commercial operations. Thus LU does not hold any theoretical moral high ground in how they fund their teams versus other schools.
As to the person saying that LU was against the separation of church and state I think that would be in error. Jerry Falwell many times repeated the statement that he was not a Dominionist and did not want the government meddling in his business. He was simply for Christians taking a more active role in politics and to bring their morality into the government as reflected by those they elected.
Of course the results have been mixed for money, power and politics do not blend well with Christian morality.
In an economy that’s slowly coming to a grinding halt - I think it’s always good news to hear how God is honoring the efforts of those who continue to uphold his name.
Seek first the Kingdom of Heaven and then all shall be added.
Way to go LU!!
Keep upholding the name of Christ and God will continue honoring!
I’m not sure why anyone would have a problem with Liberty building athletic facilities with private funds but probably doesn’t have a problem with state schools doing the same thing with your tax dollars. Since Liberty is a school, operating under the same guidelines of every other private school, I’m not sure where “separation of church and state” falls into this conversation at all.
The tax status of colleges, universities, and other eleemosynary institutions has nothing to do with the separation of church and state.
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