Traditions

Haas Pavilion

On the same site where beloved Harmon Gym stood for more than 60 years, the Walter A. Haas Jr. Pavilion has risen as a state-of-the-art sports facility that retains the old building's famous spirit.

The new basketball arena, the centerpiece of the $57.5 million project, opened in the fall of 1999 and has 12,172 seats - almost twice the capacity of its predecessor. And although the structure is 37 feet taller and 28 feet wider than Harmon, it continues to keep fans close to the action.

"The transformation of Harmon Gym into the Haas Pavilion is a magnificent addition to our campus," said Chancellor Robert Berdahl. "The moment you walk in you feel the vibrancy of the place, but you instantly feel a very real connection to the past that is just wonderful.

"Student-athletes will love to play here and our great and devoted fans will love watching the action here," he added. "But Haas Pavilion is more than just an impressive new sports facility. It provides our large campus with a venue for extraordinary campus-wide gatherings, conferences and special events." Haas Pavilion is very much an assertion of Cal's commitment to athletics - from the administration and faculty, down through the alumni who made the entire project possible.

When the construction of Haas was first proposed, alumni and fans wanted to ensure that the intimidating homecourt advantage Harmon provided could be maintained in a building twice its size. Haas was created specifically with this in mind.

Consequently, sound-baffling devices were omitted intentionally, and student seating has doubled form 1,300 seats in Harmon to 2,600 seats in Haas, with about 900 courtside. In an attempt to keep Haas as intimate as Harmon, designers built the arena with the last row of seats just 88 feet from the floor. Nearly 2,000 club seats with chair backs have been installed in the arena. Fans also enjoy wider corridors and a quadrupling of the number of restrooms and concession areas. The arena features two high-resolution video boards, more than 50 television monitors throughout the building and a team store. The elegant Haas Club Room, which overlooks Evans Baseball Diamond, provides a spacious banquet area. Cal student-athletes are also able to take advantage of new and expanded locker rooms, as well as the pavilion's weight room and athletic training facility. In addition, the facility houses Athletic Department administrative and coaches offices.

The idea of a new building to replace the aging Harmon Gym, which was built in 1933, first surfaced in the mid-1970s under then-Athletic Director Dave Maggard. During the next 20 years, a number of studies were done to determine the feasibility of a multitude of options.

Most people pushed for a renovation of Harmon, considering all the tradition already rooted there. Former Athletic Director John Kasser, who served from 1994-2000, strongly agreed that this was the proper course of action and he set about drumming up support from the administration, faculty and alumni.

When Walter A. Haas Jr. and his wife, Evelyn, generously donated the lead gift of $11 million, the project suddenly became a reality. Cal alumni supported the renovation in an unprecedented manner. Of the $57.5 million final price tag, $41 million came from private gifts, with $16.5 million coming from a combination of revenues from the Athletic Department, a campus seismic safety fund and miscellaneous income funds.

Construction on Haas Pavilion began just after the final game at Harmon in March 1997 and finished in time for the start of the 1999-2000 basketball season.

HAAS PAVILION FACTS...

  • 12,172 seats, almost double the size of Harmon Gym
  • 2,000 club seats with chair backs
  • 37 feet taller and 28 feet wider than Harmon Gym
  • 2,000 tons of steel, 10,000 cubic yards of concrete and more than 1 million square feet of dry wall were used in construction
  • Six-inch thick flooring system providing less injury to players and a better bounce to the ball
  • Two 12x16-foot high-resolution video screens
  • Four high-tech scoreboards
  • Expanded locker room, weight training and sports medicine facilities
  • Cost: $57.5 million

    WALTER A. HAAS JR.
    1916-1995

    A self-described "loving, loyal and grateful Cal alumnus," Walter A. Haas Jr. and his wife, Evelyn, committed the lead gift of $11 million for the pavilion that now bears his name.

    A 1937 Cal graduate who lettered in tennis as a senior, Haas joined Levi Strauss & Co. in 1939. He and his brother, Peter E. Haas '40, went on to lead the San Francisco-based company - the fourth generation of their family to do so - from a regional work pants manufacturer into the largest clothing maker in the world. Haas served in various leadership capacities, including president, chief executive officer and chairman of the board.

    In 1980, Haas purchased the Oakland Athletics baseball team and revived a championship dynasty. Under his ownership, the A's won three American League pennants and the 1989 World Series.

    Haas was the recipient of numerous honors and awards around the world, including the UC Berkeley Alumnus of the Year in 1984 and Berkeley Medal - the campus' highest honor - in 1991.

    Haas and his wife created the Evelyn and Walter Haas Jr. Fund in 1953, which he chaired until his death in 1995. Since its founding, the fund has made grants in excess of $95 million to nonprofit organizations, primarily in the Bay Area.