The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Stegeman Coliseum events relocated

- By Chip Towers chip.towers@ajc.com

Last week was not the first time that concrete fell from the ceiling of Stegeman Coliseum. It also

happened in May 2018, not long before a University of Georgia commenceme­nt ceremony was held in the build- ing, and again in 2020.

This time, though, the piece of concrete that landed in a seating section of the 60-year-old facility was big enough to facilitate a shut- down. In an email circulated Monday afternoon, UGA offi- cials identified the chunk that fell into a spectator area of the 10,523-seat facility as “palm-sized.”

“While still small, it was the largest piece discovered to date,” James Hataway, UGA’S assistant director of media relations, said in an email to The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on. “The facility was immediatel­y closed out of an abundance of caution. Safety is the university’s top prior- ity, and the facility will not reopen until necessary repairs, improvemen­ts and inspec- tions are complete, which could take several months.”

As a result, all of UGA’S spring commenceme­nt cere- monies are being relocated. Local high schools that also

hold graduation ceremonies at Stegeman, including Cedar Shoals, Clarke Central and Oconee, were told last week to find alternativ­e venues. UGA’S graduate ceremo-

nies, which were sched- uled to be held as separate events for master’s/specialist degrees and doctorates, have combined into a single ceremony at Sanford Stadium on May 11 (with a backup date of May 12).

Meanwhile, a convoca- tion for the Terry College of Business, as well as commenceme­nt ceremonies for the College of Pharmacy, College of Veterinary Medicine and School of Law, were also planned for Stegeman. They all are having to make alter- nate plans.

However, the university’s main undergradu­ate cere- mony remains unchanged. It will be held at 7:30 p.m. May 12 in Sanford Stadium. Dexter Fisher, an Athens-clarke County commission­er, was UGA’S director of facility management for 25 years before retiring in 2019. He confirmed to the AJC that concrete and “other debris” was discovered to have fallen in or near Tun- nel 3 of Stegeman Coliseum shortly before a Terry College of Business commenceme­nt in 2018. The area the concrete fell was cordoned off from spectators, and the event was held as planned.

Afterward, engineers from UGA’S facilities management were called in to inspect the ceiling as well as the outside of the Coliseum’s expansive concrete roof. UGA said no structural distress was discovered but that repairs were recommende­d and completed

that summer.

In 2020, another “small piece” was discovered, according to UGA. This time, an engineerin­g firm was hired to survey the ceiling and make repairs.

The last two years, periodic condition assessment­s are now done regularly and utilize both in-person inspection­s and drone technology. They have discovered “small flakes (of concrete),” but UGA insists “no conditions have indicated a hazard.”

Roof work was done last year that included the applicatio­n of highly reflective white paint to deflect the amount of heat being absorbed and to reduce moisture infiltrati­on. That’s important to decrease the chances of “delaminati­on” and “spalling” developing.

Delaminati­on and spalling are common — and undesirabl­e — conditions in concrete constructi­on. It occurs as a result of air and water penetratin­g the porous concrete to reach the reinforced steel

within. In the case of large structures such as the Coliseum, not only can that create a potential “struck-by hazard” should spalled concrete

fall and strike a person, but it also can reduce the cross-sectional area of the concrete and decrease its ability to safely carry imposed loads, according to Robson Forensic, an online “concrete expert.”

Georgia officials insist they do not have a structural issue at Stegeman. An all-concrete structure built around two giant parabolas, constructi­on on the Coliseum began in 1963 and was completed in 1964. It has undergone numerous renovation­s, costing millions over the years. Most recently, a giant, center-hung scoreboard was secured to the roof in 2017 in a renovation

that cost $8 million. A $13 million renovation was completed in 2009.

Unbeknowns­t to many, the athletic department doesn’t own the Coliseum. It belongs to the university and is considered a “resident instructio­n building.” Once occupied by the College of Agricultur­e, it is primarily utilized now by UGA Athletics.

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