*** Welcome to piglix ***

Lindner Family Tennis Center

Lindner Family Tennis Center
Location Mason, Ohio, United States
Owner Tennis for Charity, Inc.
Operator Cincinnati Tennis, LLC
Capacity 11,435 (Center Court)
5,000 (Grandstand Court)
4,000 (Court #3)
2,000 (Court #9)
Surface Hard, Outdoors
Construction
Broke ground 1979
Opened 1979
1981 - Center Court
1995 - Grandstand Court (Court 2)
1997 - Court 3
Renovated Browning Day Mullins Dierdorf
(2009-2010, 11 months)
Expanded Continuously since 1979
Construction cost Estimated at $35 million
(Latest renovation, 2009-2010, was $10 million)
Architect Browning Day Mullins Dierdorf (1981, 1995, 1997, 2010)
Main contractors Vector Construction of Northern Kentucky
Tenants
Cincinnati Masters (Men's & Women's Tennis)
(1899-present)
Website
www.cincytennis.com

The Lindner Family Tennis Center, in Mason, Ohio, is the home of the Western & Southern Open and is owned by Tennis for Charity, Inc. The grounds include four permanent tennis stadia (Center Court, Grandstand Court, Court 3 and Court 9), distinguishing the Center as the only world tennis venue, apart from the four Grand Slam venues, with more than two permanent stadia. Center Court, built in 1981 and expanded many times since, has a capacity of 11,400. Grandstand Court, built in 1995, has a capacity of 5,000. Court 3, built in 2010, seats 4,000. Court 9, built in 1997 and originally named Court 3, has a capacity of 2,000.

Its name, The Lindner Family Tennis Center, pays tribute to the family of a former tournament sponsor, the late Cincinnati financier, Carl Lindner, Jr.

Browning, Day, Mullins & Dierdorf of Indianapolis has been the architectural firm of record for the Center since its conception.

The location became home to the tournament now known as the Western & Southern Open (or Cincinnati Masters) in 1979 when tournament organizers grew weary of perennial Ohio River flooding at its venue of the time, the Coney Island amusement park. One of the tournament sponsors, Taft Broadcasting, owned the Kings Island Amusement Park in Mason, as well as the Golf Center at Kings Island, which was located on land directly across Interstate 71 from the park. When the chairman of Taft Broadcasting, Charles Mechem, suggested the tournament move to land at the Golf Center, tournament organizers, led by Paul M. Flory, agreed.

Four courts of DecoTurf II were initially installed at the new location, and the bleachers used at Coney Island were shipped up I-71 and placed around one of them to form Center Court. Two years later, those bleachers were removed and the first phase of construction on that court began. Enhancements to seating and amenities on Center Court have been made nearly every year since.

One of the biggest expansions came in 1987 when the original West Building was added, creating working space for players and media and luxury suites for fans. An expansion in 1990 added more suites and increased capacity on Center Court to 10,000. Construction in 1998 added two additional courts, bringing the total number of courts at the Tennis Center to 10.


...
Wikipedia

...