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DU Stadium

DU Stadium
Full name DU Stadium
Former names Hilltop Stadium
Location University of Denver
Denver, Colorado
Coordinates 39°40′53″N 104°57′47″W / 39.6815°N 104.963°W / 39.6815; -104.963Coordinates: 39°40′53″N 104°57′47″W / 39.6815°N 104.963°W / 39.6815; -104.963
Owner University of Denver
Operator University of Denver
Capacity 30,000
Surface Natural grass
Construction
Broke ground March 1925
Opened 1926, 91 years ago
Demolished 1970s
Construction cost $571,000
Tenants
Denver Pioneers (NCAA) (1926–1960)
Air Force Falcons (NCAA) (1955–1961)
Denver Broncos (AFL) (1960)

DU Stadium (sometimes referred to as Hilltop Stadium) was a stadium in the western United States, on the campus of the University of Denver in Denver, Colorado. Built in 1926, the crescent-shaped main grandstand design on the west sideline was based on other similar-sized stadiums from the same the time period, Brown Stadium and Cornell's Schoellkopf Field, both in the Ivy League.

It hosted the DU Pioneers college football until the program was discontinued in 1961, due to mounting deficits. The stadium had a seating capacity of 30,000 at its peak, and the natural grass field had a conventional north-south orientation at an elevation of 5,350 feet (1,630 m) above sea level. Nearly a half century in age, it was torn down in the early 1970s.

DU played its first football game in 1885, and by 1909 had moved to a 10,000-seat grandstand in University Park. By 1924, DU football had outgrown that grandstand, and DU alumni decided to launch an ambitious public bond drive to fund a new stadium. The University broke ground for Hilltop Stadium in March 1925.

The construction costs ran just under $571,000, with the project using one million board-feet of lumber, 7,000 cubic feet (200 m3) of concrete and 295 tons of steel. The community called the new structure by the nickname “Monument to Concrete.” The famous sculptor Robert Garrison created two massive figures of athletes, one male and one female, for the Stadium’s main entrance as symbols of the value of coeducation and “the vitality, the vigor, and the strength of modern American youth”.

In the venue’s first official game, DU defeated Colorado School of Mines by a score of 27–7. However, no regional match-up overshadowed the annual rivalry game between DU and the University of Colorado, Boulder (CU) at Thanksgiving. This tradition came to end when CU joined a different athletic conference in 1948. The facility also hosted other sports during its history including soccer and track and field. The use of Hilltop Stadium extended beyond the realm of athletic competition as well. For example, Charles Lindbergh visited the Denver landmark during a parade held in his honor in 1927. Hilltop Stadium also hosted outdoor theater productions and DU commencement ceremonies for a number of years.


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