A broken water pipe dealt Amherst Regional its first loss of the fall sports season.
Water damage from a summer flood will prevent the girls volleyball team from playing its home games at the high school this season in addition to affecting physical education classes, area recreational sports and potentially the basketball season.
Over the final weekend in July, a pipe burst in one of the bathrooms at the top of the stairs near the Amherst Regional athletic offices, Amherst athletic director Rich Ferro said.
โLike in half, not just a little water coming out, like literally he whole thing snapped in half,โ Ferro said.
The water poured out for an undetermined period of time until Amherst principal Mark Jackson returned from vacation to find water coming toward his office.
It seeped into the gym and out to the center courtโs 3-point line nearest the doors by the hallway. The water eventually went down into the boiler room, โwhich had the first decent-sized drain that could handle that (the water),โ Ferro said.
Inches of standing water sat on the basketball court before Amherst started the cleanup and drying process.
Amherst used a dome-tent like device to dry the floor before assessing the damage.
Sections of the floor bowed and became discolored.
โWeโve been waiting to find out exactly what the full amount of damage is. When youโve got water underneath the floor thereโs the very apparent buckling,โ Ferro said. โItโs next to impossible to dry out the surface underneath. Weโve got everything in here to deal with the possibility of mold.โ
The plan now is to replace the gym floor.
Amherst brought an architect in Tuesday morning to begin drafting cost estimates.
The insurance company will do its own inspection and cost estimates later in the week.
Ferro is hoping to have an idea of how much the project will cost by early next week.
โFor a project that big, you have to go through a full procurement process, which can go to a full three months,โ he said. โThatโs everything leading up to and including construction. The earliest construction can start is the beginning of November.โ
That displaces the girls volleyball team for the entirety of its season. Right now the team will practice and play at the middle school.
โI think the hardest part is rethinking everything โ where you store your nets, how to set up the nets,โ Amherst volleyball coach Kacey Schmitt said. โYou donโt have everything as easy as it was when youโve done it the same way.โ
The middle school features two regulation-sized courts oriented in a way that limits the amount of space around the court.
โThe courts are not optimal. You donโt have enough room to pursue a shanked ball,โ Schmitt said. โItโs kind of like the Hoosierโs movie. Iโm going to measure the court just like Gene Hackman measured the basketball net. The only difference is the physical surroundings, and that doesnโt affect our play unless we let it.โ
The Hurricanes have embraced the challenges.
โThe team is pretty bummed that we wonโt be able to play on our home court this season, but weโre gonna tough through it and still play our hardest no matter what court weโre on,โ Amherst junior Amina Torres said.
The construction timeline also potentially affects the basketball teams.
Amherst hopes to have a plan in place by the time basketball season starts. The boys varsity team will play its opening game at Curry Hicks Cage.
โI understand thereโs a chance we donโt play our first couple home games (in the gym), but Iโm hoping and praying that we do,โ Amherst senior Seth Bella-Hunter said. โA lot of our guys are seniors, and we want to have home games in front of our home crowd, so hopefully they get it fixed in time for the season and hopefully a Western Mass championship run.โ
Ferro has reached out to UMass and Amherst College about potentially hosting games at their facilities.
โWe work really well with Amherst College,โ he said. โI know theyโre going to do their best to help us out when they can.โ
Physical education classes will use the unaffected back portion of the gym in addition to the weight room. Theyโll also go outside.
โItโs not ideal, but for P.E. classes, weโre going to make it work,โ Ferro said.
Kyle Grabowski can be reached at kgrabowski@gazettenet.com.
