BioSteel Centre Officially Opens Ahead of NBA All-Star Weekend

By: Jack Landau

Since the team’s inception in 1995, the NBA’s Toronto Raptors haven’t had an official purpose-built training facility to call their own. With the clock ticking down to the NBA All-Star Weekend, and basketball fever beginning to overtake Toronto, the time was ripe to change that. On Feb. 10, Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment (MLSE) Chairman Larry Tanenbaum and Masai Ujiri, the Raptors’ president and general manager, were joined by Mayor John Tory, NBA Deputy Commissioner Mark Tatum, BioSteel President John Celenza and others to officially open the BioSteel Centre, the Raptors’ new 68,000-square-foot training facility in Exhibition Place.

Naming rights for the training center were purchased by Toronto-based sports drink manufacturer BioSteel last year. As part of the deal, the BioSteel logo will be featured on the upper-right corner of the Raptors’ practice jersey.

Designed by Guernsey with supporting architects Baldwin & Franklin, the long-anticipated facility will replace the existing practice courts at the Air Canada Centre – until now used as the team’s practice venue – while also serving as a venue for a number of basketball development camps and other community groups.

Set back from the intersection of British Colombia Road and Yukon Place at the west end of the park and event venue, the two-story, 68,000-square-foot facility houses a main practice space with two full-size basketball courts. The courts are capable of being divided using a soundproof partition hidden within the ceiling, known as a Skyfold wall. The facility also will house training and treatment facilities, offices, a players’ locker room, lounge space, a video viewing room and much more.

Occupying the southeastern corner of the building’s ground floor is a fully equipped gym featuring a selection of state-of-the-art workout equipment. The lofty space features two stories of windows along the south and east sides, allowing ample natural light into the space.

The most eye-catching piece of equipment in the gym is the FitLight Trainer, a machine featuring RGB LED lights controlled by a tablet. Athletes use the lights as targets to deactivate, and they can be set for practically every sport and training regime.

Adjacent to the gym, a selection of recovery and regeneration spaces are on hand for athletes. Located at the south end of the ground floor, this area includes massage tables, water therapy stations, saunas and steam rooms, as well as a trainer’s room and office space.

Among the most interesting features of the facility’s ground floor is an IBM-designed interactive space called Raptors Insights Central. This digital command center features a nine-screen wall system connected to three touch screens embedded within a boardroom table, allowing staff to analyze player development and activity from across the league. Cognitive operations centers such as this one are known in the sports industry as war rooms. This space uses a “dark fiber” connection that links it directly to the Air Canada Centre, allowing for rapid exchange of information, including video, stats, analytics and communications.

A video viewing room adjacent to the main court area will provide the Raptors with a place to analyze the play styles of other teams and players, a common component in NBA practice facilities located in the United States.

The ground floor of the BioSteel Centre also will include locker rooms for the athletes, and even a dedicated barber shop.

The second level of the facility offers space for the athletes to unwind and socialize, including a players dining area overlooking the main court area with a full commercial kitchen, a green roof, a gas barbecue area, an outdoor lounge area and views of Lake Ontario.

The second floor also includes viewing areas overlooking the courts and the fitness center.

The new facility is being hailed as a major step forward for the Toronto Raptors organization, and a tangible display of MLSE’s goal to bring an NBA championship north of the border.

Urban Toronto