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Halas Hall

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Halas Hall (officially the PNC Center at Halas Hall) is a building complex in Lake Forest, Illinois, that serves as the headquarters of the Chicago Bears of the National Football League (NFL). The 38-acre (15 ha) complex opened on March 3, 1997 and was expanded in 2013 and 2018.[2]

Key Information

History

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Background

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Named after founder George Halas and designed by Peter Rose of Peter Rose + Partners,[3] the building hosts the team's front office, as well as indoor and outdoor practice facilities and cost $20 million.[4]

The location is 4 miles (6.4 km) west of the original Halas Hall which opened in 1977, which was named after George Halas Jr., who died unexpectedly in 1979. It was located at Lake Forest College and contained 2 practice fields (one regulation-size outdoor field as well as a 70-yard practice field) and front office facilities,[5] which is now used by the Foresters Athletics Department.[6] Since 1990 the Bears also leased an indoor 60 by 80 yard practice facility in Waukegan.[7][8]

Renovations

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In 2013, the Bears announced that Halas Hall would be renovated to include an event center, broadcast studio, outdoor patio, and dining facility, as well as additional conference rooms and staff offices. They also announced that they would expand the parking lot and renovate the entrance to the lobby. The event centers feature interactive digital displays, video monitors and memorabilia such as the Bears' 1963 NFL Championship Game trophy.[9][10] The new facility was designed by Richard Preves & Associates, PC. On April 21, 2015, PNC Financial Services purchased the naming rights to the new building, naming it the PNC Center at Halas Hall.[11]

On November 17, 2017, Ted Phillips announced the franchise would expand and renovate Halas Hall to effectively double its size. The project was designed by HOK began in March 2018 and concluded in August 2019.[12][13]

The expanded Halas Hall included: 162,500 square feet (15,100 m2) football operations addition to the existing 143,000 square feet (13,300 m2) facility and a 30,600 square feet (2,840 m2) renovation on the building’s northeast side. A 3,250 square feet (302 m2) players' lounge was created and a 1,700 square feet (160 m2) players locker room. Also, two additional football fields were added, which brought the total to four fields (not including the indoors Walter Payton Center).[14]

After renovations were finished in which training rooms were expanded and new playing fields were added, the Bears moved their training camp to Halas Hall for the 2020 season.[14]

Features

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Reference[15][16][17]

Walter Payton Training Center located within Halas Hall
  • Four outdoors practice fields - with approximately 12,000 temporary seats[18] during training camp and a practice 40-person viewing suite for corporate partners in the main field. It also includes a training slope and a storage facility.
  • Walter Payton Training Center - an artificial turf indoors practice field with a viewing suite for corporate partners and other VIP guests.
  • 13,000 square feet (1,200 m2) Indoor turf space - for training and walkthroughs with a 133x26 video board and adjacent virtual reality room.
  • "Mugs" Halas Auditorium - with 130 seats capacity.
  • Conference rooms - Halas Hall features 20 conference rooms named after Bears legends and football terminology, such as the Bronko Nagurski Room, Red Grange Room, Brian Piccolo Room, Wrigley Room and Decatur Room.
  • Press conference room and media courtyard - A 60 participants conference room plus a work space and office for media members.
  • PNC Center - a ballroom that can hold dining events for 120, business meeting for 150 and parties for 200, with adjacent TV production studio.
  • Football operations facilities - includes: position meeting rooms, coaches' offices, 3,250 square feet (302 m2) players' lounge and 4,300 square feet (400 m2) team and 7,608 square feet (706.8 m2) staff café with outdoor patio space at a capacity of 100 people.
  • Locker rooms - 1,700 square feet (160 m2) players' locker room, separate coaches/scouts locker room and weight room name after former Bears strength coach Clyde Emrich which includes a lap pool.
  • Sports medicine space - including two hydrotherapy pools, two plunge pools, a float pod, sauna and steam room.
  • Event center - features Chicago Bears themed memorabilia and players exhibits, such as the 1985 Lombardi Trophy and 1963 Championship Trophy.[19]
  • A 1.5-mile (2.4 km) running and cycling path and a racquetball and basketball courts.

References

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from Grokipedia
Halas Hall is the headquarters and training facility of the Chicago Bears, an National Football League (NFL) franchise, located at 1920 Football Drive in Lake Forest, Illinois.[1] Named in honor of George S. Halas, the Bears' founder, longtime owner, head coach, and player, the complex serves as the central hub for the team's administrative operations, player training, and media interactions.[2] The origins of Halas Hall trace back to 1979, when the original facility was dedicated on the campus of Lake Forest College by George Halas in memory of his son, Mugs Halas, a former Bears executive who died in 1979.[2] The Bears relocated to the current site in Conway Park—a 38-acre complex off Route 60, just four miles from the original location—on March 3, 1997, marking a significant upgrade from the college campus setup.[2][3] Since its opening, Halas Hall has undergone multiple expansions to meet the evolving needs of a modern NFL organization, including a 43,500-square-foot addition completed after the 2012 season and a major 162,500-square-foot expansion with a 30,600-square-foot remodel that broke ground in March 2018 and opened in August 2019.[1][2] Key features include a 13,000-square-foot indoor turf practice area equipped with a video wall and virtual reality room, an expanded 2,000-square-foot weight room, a fourfold-enlarged sports medicine facility with a hydrotherapy pool, and a 3,250-square-foot player lounge.[2] The complex also houses Bears-themed displays chronicling nearly a century of team history, a virtual history tour in the lobby, and two additional practice fields adjacent to the Walter Payton Center.[4][5] These enhancements underscore Halas Hall's role in preserving the Bears' legacy while supporting high-performance athletics and operations.[1]

Background

Location and Ownership

Halas Hall is located at 1920 Football Drive, Lake Forest, Illinois 60045, within the Conway Park corporate campus off Route 60 just east of the Tri-State Tollway.[6][2] The facility occupies a 38-acre complex dedicated to Chicago Bears operations.[2] Fully owned by the Chicago Bears organization since its construction and opening in 1997, Halas Hall functions as the team's primary headquarters for football operations.[3][2] This includes facilities for player training, coaching staff offices, sports medicine, nutrition, rehabilitation, and broader administrative functions supporting the NFL franchise.[2] Following expansions in 2013 and 2019, the building's total footprint measures 305,500 square feet.[7] Named in honor of longtime Bears owner and coach George Halas, the site underscores the organization's commitment to elite performance standards in professional football.[1]

Naming and Significance

Halas Hall is named after George "Papa Bear" Halas, the founder, owner, player, and longtime head coach of the Chicago Bears, who was born on February 2, 1895, in Chicago and died on October 31, 1983.[8] Halas established the franchise in 1920 as the Decatur Staleys before relocating it to Chicago and renaming it the Bears in 1922, leading the team to six NFL championships during his 40-year coaching tenure spanning 1920 to 1967.[8][1] As a charter member of the NFL's founding meeting in Canton, Ohio, on September 17, 1920, Halas played a pivotal role in organizing the league and innovating practices such as daily training sessions, film study, and radio broadcasts of games.[8] The facility embodies Halas's enduring vision of discipline, innovation, and excellence in professional football, serving as a symbol of continuity for the Bears' storied tradition.[1] Built in 1997 and dedicated to Halas as the team's headquarters, it honors his legacy as the architect of the franchise's success and the NFL's early development.[1] Upon its opening on March 3, 1997, Halas Hall featured initial tributes to its namesake, including plaques, memorabilia, and themed displays that highlight his contributions to the sport and the Bears' achievements.[2] In 2015, a nine-foot-tall white bronze statue of Halas was unveiled outside the building during a private ceremony attended by family members and Hall of Famers, further commemorating his impact.[9] Beyond its operational role, Halas Hall holds significant cultural importance as a pilgrimage site for Bears fans and a central hub for preserving the team's history.[10]

History

Early Association with Chicago Bears

The Chicago Bears established their association with Lake Forest College in 1975, leasing campus facilities for training camp and administrative offices as part of an initial 20-year agreement that extended until 1997.[11] Initially, the team used Ferry Hall, a former girls' boarding school on the campus, for offices from 1975 to 1978, while conducting practices on existing fields like Farwell Field.[12] This arrangement marked a shift from prior training sites, providing a more permanent suburban base closer to Chicago compared to earlier locations such as St. Joseph's College in Rensselaer, Indiana.[13] To better accommodate NFL operations, the Bears funded the construction of a dedicated building on campus, completed in 1979 and named Halas Hall in honor of team founder George Halas.[14] This new facility included expanded locker rooms, office spaces, and adjacent practice fields—one regulation-sized outdoor field and a 70-yard indoor practice area—enhancing the team's year-round presence at the college. The structure, designed specifically for professional football needs, replaced temporary setups and solidified the Bears' integration with the academic environment, though it remained college property under the lease terms.[11] By the mid-1990s, as the lease neared its end, the Bears sought greater control and modernization, opting to develop a fully owned headquarters rather than continue as tenants.[2] In 1997, the team purchased a 38-acre site at Conway Park in western Lake Forest, departing the college after 22 years and transitioning operations to the new location by March 3.[14] This relocation ended a longstanding partnership that had elevated the college's profile while providing the Bears with a stable training hub during a period of league growth.[15]

Construction and Opening

In the early 1990s, the Chicago Bears sought a dedicated headquarters to consolidate operations, leading to the acquisition of a 38-acre site at Conway Park in Lake Forest, Illinois.[16] Under the direction of then-president Michael McCaskey, the planning process involved studying more than 15 NFL facilities and 20 college complexes to ensure the design prioritized functionality for professional football operations, including training, administration, and player development.[16] Construction of the new Halas Hall began in 1996 as a $23 million project, representing a significant investment in the team's infrastructure.[16] The facility, spanning 98,000 square feet—three times the size of the previous setup—was completed within a year and officially opened on March 3, 1997, when the Bears relocated all business and football operations from their leased space at Lake Forest College.[2][3][17] The initial design incorporated essential features for an NFL franchise, including basic offices and locker rooms for over 150 staff and players, a weight room four times larger than the prior one, nine classrooms, a 150-seat theater for media and team meetings, an indoor practice bubble, and two-and-a-half outdoor practice fields—one equipped with 14 miles of heating tubing for year-round use.[16] This setup marked the end of the Bears' temporary arrangements at Lake Forest College following the original Halas Hall's dedication in 1979, enabling immediate commencement of team activities such as practices and administrative functions.[2][16]

Renovations and Expansions

In February 2013, the Chicago Bears announced a renovation project for Halas Hall, which began construction shortly thereafter to enhance both football operations and fan experiences.[18] The upgrades included the addition of a 4,000-square-foot event center and broadcast studio capable of hosting up to 150 people, an outdoor patio, a new dining facility, and expanded training areas such as the weight and training rooms, which grew from 7,000 to 8,500 square feet with upgraded lighting; the locker room also received improvements.[19][20] The project, fast-tracked by Mortenson Construction, was completed by August 2013 at an undisclosed cost.[20] On April 21, 2015, PNC Financial Services acquired naming rights to the 2013 event space addition as part of a broader sponsorship deal with the Bears, renaming it the PNC Center at Halas Hall; this marked the team's first-ever naming rights agreement for a facility component.[21][22] A more extensive expansion was announced on November 17, 2017, with groundbreaking in March 2018, designed by the architecture firm HOK to modernize the headquarters ahead of the Bears' 100th anniversary season.[2][23] The project added 162,500 square feet of new space to the existing 143,000-square-foot facility, along with a 30,600-square-foot remodel, at a multi-million-dollar cost that was not publicly disclosed.[24][25] Key features included a new 1,700-square-foot player locker room with an integrated barbershop, a 3,250-square-foot players' lounge, expanded coaches' and scouts' locker areas with sauna and steam facilities, and additional conference rooms themed around Bears history.[26] The expansion was fully completed and unveiled on August 29, 2019.[26] In January 2020, the Bears announced they would relocate their annual training camp to Halas Hall starting that year, ending an 18-year partnership with Olivet Nazarene University in Bourbonnais and returning to their headquarters full-time for the first time since the early 2000s. This move, facilitated by the recent expansions, allows for integrated operations and continues as of 2025 with public practice sessions.[27] Following the 2019 completion, Halas Hall has seen minor operational adjustments, including enhancements to technology for training and administration, with no major structural expansions reported as of November 2025.[26]

Facilities and Features

Athletic Training Areas

Halas Hall features four full-size outdoor practice fields, consisting of a combination of natural grass and artificial turf surfaces, which surround the main building and are utilized for drills, scrimmages, and team practices.[26] These fields enable distributed field use during off-season training and in-season sessions, accommodating multiple position groups simultaneously to optimize preparation efficiency.[26] The indoor Walter Payton Training Center provides a 13,000-square-foot climate-controlled space with artificial turf, designed for year-round walkthroughs, conditioning, and practice sessions regardless of weather conditions.[2] This facility, introduced as part of the 2019 expansion, includes a 133-by-26-foot video projection wall for film review and tactical drills, enhancing player development through immersive training experiences.[2] Dedicated sports medicine and recovery areas at Halas Hall support injury prevention, treatment, and rehabilitation, featuring two hydrotherapy pools, two plunge pools, a float pod, sauna, steam room, training tables, and specialized equipment.[26] These spaces, expanded to four times their original size in 2019, prioritize player wellness by integrating advanced recovery protocols into daily routines.[26] The athletic training infrastructure at Halas Hall accommodates daily practices for the Chicago Bears' 53-man active roster along with the practice squad, totaling up to 90 players during training camp and preseason.[27] Post-2019 enhancements have improved overall player wellness through expanded recovery options and optimized training layouts, reducing downtime and supporting sustained performance throughout the season.[26]

Administrative and Event Spaces

Halas Hall provides extensive administrative facilities to support the Chicago Bears' front office, coaching staff, and scouting operations. Following the 2019 expansion and remodel, the complex includes over 20 conference rooms dedicated to meetings for coaching strategies, player evaluations, and personnel decisions, with rooms named after team legends such as the Brian Piccolo Room and the Decatur Room.[26] These spaces feature upgraded technology and larger layouts to accommodate collaborative work, including executive suites for senior management to enhance efficiency in daily decision-making.[28] The facility also hosts a variety of events through dedicated venues integrated into its design. The PNC Center serves as a versatile ballroom capable of hosting team gatherings, press conferences, and corporate functions, with configurations supporting up to 200 guests for receptions, 150 for business meetings, and 120 for seated dining; this space was originally added in 2013 as part of an earlier expansion to bolster event capabilities.[4] Adjacent to it, the George "Mugs" Halas Auditorium offers 130 seats for film reviews, team presentations, and introductory events for new staff and players.[4] Player and staff support areas within the administrative zones include modernized locker facilities and relaxation spaces updated in 2019. The player locker room underwent a 1,700-square-foot expansion with state-of-the-art, personalized lockers equipped with charging stations, lighting, and custom engravings to improve comfort and organization.[25] Complementing this is a 3,250-square-foot team lounge designed for downtime, featuring comfortable seating, entertainment options, and proximity to dining areas to foster team bonding outside of meetings.[25] Staff locker rooms were similarly expanded to better serve the organization's personnel.[26] Halas Hall houses the majority of the Chicago Bears' full-time staff members—with others at the team's downtown Chicago office—who manage year-round operations, including contract negotiations, scouting reports, and NFL draft preparations conducted in specialized rooms equipped for video analysis and strategic planning.[29][26] These functions ensure seamless coordination between the front office and on-field activities throughout the season and offseason.

Media and Cultural Amenities

Halas Hall incorporates advanced broadcast facilities to support the Chicago Bears' media operations, including a 2,100-square-foot in-house video-production studio constructed during the 2013 renovation, designed for versatile content creation such as player interviews and team highlights.[30] This studio enables the production of multimedia content for the Bears' official platforms. The main lobby features a prominent 28-by-5-foot video board, complemented by approximately 175 video displays distributed throughout the facility, enhancing real-time information sharing and visual engagement for staff and visitors.[23] The event center's two-level entryway serves as a hub for memorabilia and exhibits, showcasing interactive digital displays and video monitors alongside rare Bears artifacts, including the 1963 NFL championship trophy and items from the George Halas era that highlight the franchise's founding years.[4][3] These elements provide an immersive introduction to the team's legacy, with never-before-seen pieces that connect visitors to pivotal moments in Bears history. Dedicated spaces facilitate fan and media interactions, including a press conference room on the main level that accommodates up to 60 journalists, a media courtyard, and workspaces tailored for reporters during events.[4] These areas support guided tours of the facility and bolster digital media production for the team's website and social channels, allowing for live streams, post-game analysis, and fan-oriented content.[31] Halas Hall's design integrates Bears history into its everyday environment through thematic artwork and timelines depicting franchise milestones, such as George Halas's contributions from his University of Illinois athletic days to establishing the team in 1920.[32] Themes like "Greatness," "Passion," "Tradition," and "Game-day" are woven into exhibits and graphics, reinforcing cultural preservation and inspiring the organization's daily operations.[32]

References

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