Conibear Shellhouse
$18.0 million (2005)[2]
The Conibear Shellhouse is a rowing training and support facility in Seattle, Washington, on the campus of the University of Washington. It is used by the men's and women's rowing teams of the Washington Huskies. The building was completed in 1949 and renovated in 2005. It is located on Lake Washington, near the Lake Washington Ship Canal.
The facility is named after former coach Hiram Boardman Conibear.
The Conibear Shellhouse was built to replace the old Shell House, now known as the Canoe House, which is further south along the lake shore. The original Shell House was an old seaplane hangar that was turned over to the University of Washington after World War I.
See also
- The Boys in the Boat
- ASUW Shell House
References
External links
- Washington Rowing site
- Washington Rowing Foundation site
- v
- t
- e
Departments |
---|
Teams | |
---|---|
Venues | |
Other |
- Benson Hall
- Condon Hall
- Denny Hall
- Drumheller Fountain
- Gerberding Hall
- Hill-Crest Mansion
- Husky Union Building
- Odegaard Undergraduate Library
- Off the Rez
- Planetarium
- Jones Playhouse
- Meany Hall
- Quad
- Red Square
- Suzzallo Library
- Sylvan Grove Theater and Columns
- Magnuson Health Sciences Center
- William H. Gates Hall
- UW Tower
Museums |
---|
- KEXP-FM/Seattle
- KEXC/Alameda, CA
- KUOW-FM/Seattle
- KUOW/Tumwater–Olympia
- University of Washington Television
- Center for Neurotechnology
- Clean Energy Institute
- COASST
- Friday Harbor Laboratories
- Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation
- International Arctic Buoy Program
- Manastash Ridge Observatory
- Manastash Ridge Radar
- NeuroNames
- Rosetta@home
- Theodor Jacobsen Observatory
- University of Washington Medical Center
- Virtual Planetary Laboratory
- Seattle (Main)
- Bothell
- Tacoma
- North Sound (cancelled)
- Founded: 1861
This article about a university or college in the state of Washington is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e