By Andrew Mitchell
Although the Whistler Gymnastics Club has at least three more
years of setting up and taking down every piece of equipment for every class,
there’s light at the end of the tunnel.
Working with the Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010
Olympics, the Resort Municipality of Whistler has set aside $2 million in its
five-year financial plan for a full time gymnasium that will be adjoined to the
Whistler Athletes’ Centre. The centre will likely be managed by Whistler
Gymnastics, but will be available to other community groups and teams that have
expressed an interest in a gymnastics and trampoline facility.
“One of the things that still has to be worked out is the
governance model, and how it will operate. At this stage we already know that
the athletes centre will be owned by the Whistler Legacy Society,” said Keith
Bennett, general manager of parks and recreation.
“I think we always hoped we would reach that point when we had
the critical mass to have a dedicated gymnastics facility, where the equipment
is always set up. I know there is a lot of pressure on the schools with the
number of sports being offered and kids, which means the equipment comes down
at the end of every class, and which limits the operations (Whistler
Gymnastics) does have.”
How the gymnastics facility will be physically incorporated in
the athletes’ village has yet to be determined, but Bennett expects to see some
rough plans in the near future.
“It’s really in the preliminary stages right now,” said
Bennett. “We’ve agreed with VANOC on the concept but at this point we’re still
in very early stages. VANOC is going out and looking for expressions of
interest for the architectural services to design the building, but we haven’t
picked the architect or plan yet.”
Bennett says the goal is to have the facility open for 2009, or
during 2009 at the very latest. Whether the Whistler Gymnastics Club can start
using the facility once it’s completed is yet to be decided, but it will be
unavailable to the club immediately before and during the Games.
For the Whistler Gymnastics Club, the full time facility will
be a huge improvement for the club.
“The coaches are excited, the parents are excited, it’s going
to be huge for the club,” said club director Catou Crookshank.
The club offers classes four days a week at Myrtle Philip
Community School, and has to set up and take down every piece of equipment
before and after each class. It takes about half an hour to set up and take
down, cutting into club time and resources.
“The equipment gets beaten up from setting up and taking down,
which means we’re always replacing things, and all of the coaches have
injuries,” said Crookshank.
The club currently has almost 200 kids in programs, from age 5
to 16, and there are waitlists for many programs. As well, the challenge of
booking gym time has also had an impact.
“Basically we’re maxed out right now, to the point where we have
to cancel programs sometimes because of the amount of time we have in the
facility. A lot of the time we have to turn people away,” said Crookshank.
When time and coaches are available, the club provides
facilities and coaching for provincial and national level athletes, but
sometimes these groups get turned away.
The club also has seen interest from international athletes
— when Whistler hosted the FIS Snowboard World Championships the club
received at least four calls from national teams looking for a place to train
in the evenings.
Local groups who have used Whistler Gymnastics’ equipment and
coaches to cross-train include the Whistler Mountain Ski Club, the Whistler
Kids Freeride Club, the Whistler Blackcomb Freestyle Club, and various language
schools and camps. Once the facility is open, other prospective users include
martial arts and dance organizations, as well as trampoline classes that
Whistler Gymnastics is currently unable to offer despite a high level of
interest from the community.
With the new facility, says Crookshank, Whistler Gymnastics
will be able to accommodate a lot more programs and gymnasts, as well as to
provide those gymnasts with better equipment and training. One area the club is
currently lacking is in the floor exercise area, as the club only has a
tumbling track instead of a full-size competition floor.
“You really notice a difference in competition,” she said. “We
try to do the best we can with tumbling skills, but if we had a full-time
spring floor it would be great — kids would learn to use the
whole floor, and would get more time to practice tumbling.”
Whistler Gymnastics Club is currently raising funds to buy new
equipment for the athletes’ centre.
This is the Whistler Gymnastics Club’s 20 th year in operation.