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Benderson Park sports complex enters next phase of planning

The indoor facility and boathouse will feature dozens of sport courts to attract a variety of athletic tournaments.


The planned indoor sports complex at Nathan Benderson Park will also serve as a boathouse for rowing activities.
The planned indoor sports complex at Nathan Benderson Park will also serve as a boathouse for rowing activities.
Courtesy image
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From what was once a borrow pit for I-75 construction has emerged, over the last 12 years, a best-in-class rowing facility known as Nathan Benderson Park. 

The next phase of its evolution from what once was literally a giant hole in the ground is a planned indoor sports complex and boathouse, a joint effort of Sarasota County Parks, Recreation and Natural Resources and the Nathan Benderson Park Conservancy. 

The facility is planned to be built on the island next to the finish tower.

Nicole Rissler, the county’s PRNR director, briefed the County Commission at its July 9 meeting on the progress of planning for the facility, which has reached the 30% design phase. 

That planning began in January 2022 when the Nathan Benderson Park Conservancy procured a consulting agency to perform an initial feasibility study, the results of which were presented to the commission four months later. At that time, commissioners approved dedicating $20 million toward the project  from the Capital Improvements/Facilities Fund of the Tourist Development Tax, third additional one cent levy.

In addition to a boathouse, the first floor layout of the planned indoor sports complex at Nathan Benderson Park includes eight basketball courts, 16 volleyball courts and 30 pickleball courts.
Courtesy image

“So what have we done since then? A whole lot of data collection, research of other facilities and feedback from various sports and facilities subject matter experts,” Rissler told commissioners. “I think I sat in 15 hours of focus groups of different entities — the pickleball group, the volleyball group, the basketball group, the rowing group — on what if they started with a white piece of paper, what would be the ultimate facility?”

The result of that input as work begins to take the project to 90% planning includes:

First floorSecond floor
  • 100,000 square feet of playing surface
  • 8 basketball courts
  • 16 volleyball courts
  • 30 pickleball courts
  • 24 wrestling mats
  • Boathouse with at least 24 storage racks, boat repair space, performance center and rental shop
  • Locker rooms
  • Restaurant and concessions
  • Multipurpose meeting and/or vendor space
  • Offices
  • High-performance training center
  • Athlete lounge
  • Multipurpose rooms
  • Offices
  • Court-viewing mezzanines

“As many of you know, we don't have a whole lot of indoor space here in Sarasota County for community use and for special events,” Rissler said. “In my former life as the director of sports for Visit Sarasota County, one of the areas that we couldn't go after is events. We just don't have the indoor space to do it, so that's part of the feasibility study.”

A rendering shows the location of the planned indoor sports complex at Nathan Benderson Park.
Courtesy image

The indoor sports complex is necessary for the continued attraction of national and even international rowing events at Nathan Benderson Park, which bring with them hotel room nights and the economic impact of considerable spending. 

Commissioner Joe Neunder pointed out the importance of the high-performance training center for attracting elite athletes here to train and compete.

“That will be a game changer, especially when you talk about Olympic athletes who are looking to peak at the top of their game to qualify for global events,” Neunder said. “I think that's a huge sell.”

The inventory of indoor sports courts is intended to draw large tournaments in addition to availability for public use. That includes access to the high-performance training center.

“I think being flexible enough allows classes, a membership and those kinds of things when Olympic athletes or college teams aren't using those facilities,” Rissler said.

Staff and consultants have visited and continue to visit comparable indoor sports complexes to view real-world examples for the next 60% of design that is expected to begin soon. They include:

  • IMG Academy in Bradenton
  • Rock Hill Event Center in Rock Hill, South Carolina
  • Upward Star Event Center in Spartanburg, South Carolina
  • Hoover Met Complex in Hoover, Alabama
  • The Big House in Tavares, Florida
  • Wiregrass Ranch Sports Campus in Wesley Chapel

“We know there's a community need,” Rissler said. “What we found is we really are a sweet spot on the West Coast of Florida. You have Tampa and Orlando from a convention center perspective. You have some smaller facilities like Wiregrass in the Tampa area, but really between us and Hertz Arena in Fort Myers there's a big gap in our area.”

 

author

Andrew Warfield

Andrew Warfield is the Sarasota Observer city reporter. He is a four-decade veteran of print media. A Florida native, he has spent most of his career in the Carolinas as a writer and editor, nearly a decade as co-founder and editor of a community newspaper in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina.

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