Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q7807727> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 54 of
54
with 100 triples per page.
- Q7807727 subject Q7156632.
- Q7807727 subject Q7387139.
- Q7807727 subject Q8369062.
- Q7807727 subject Q8369767.
- Q7807727 subject Q8682572.
- Q7807727 abstract "Officially named the Indoor Athletic Center (or Court), the Tin Can was the home of North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball from the 1924 season until the team's relocation to the Woollen Gymnasium in 1938. It replaced Bynum Gymnasium, a venue known for its unusual running track suspended above the court.Rudimentarily built of steel, attempts to heat the building during early season at first failed, with ice often forming inside:The team, known as the White Phantoms, used this to their advantage, becoming one of the South's most successful programs by the mid-1920s.As success continued into Southern Conference play in the 1930s, the capacity of the Tin Can proved insufficient to meet the increased interest in the team. North Carolina played the last of their games there at the end of the 1938 season, having officially moved to the adjacent Woollen Gymnasium on January 4, 1938. In fourteen years, the team had accumulated a 120–38 winning record.No longer needed for major athletic events the Tin Can was used for a variety of purposes during the remainder of its life. Immediately after World War II, the arena housed returning veterans due to a shortage of dormitory space, while in the early 1950s it was used for storage of medical equipment before the completion of North Carolina Memorial Hospital. After hosting a limited number of indoor track meetings in preceding years, the Tin Can was finally demolished in 1977 to allow the construction of the present day Fetzer Gymnasium.".
- Q7807727 buildingStartDate "1921".
- Q7807727 cost "54482.45".
- Q7807727 location Q1454.
- Q7807727 location Q30.
- Q7807727 location Q671812.
- Q7807727 owner Q192334.
- Q7807727 tenant Q3098948.
- Q7807727 wikiPageWikiLink Q1342.
- Q7807727 wikiPageWikiLink Q1400.
- Q7807727 wikiPageWikiLink Q1454.
- Q7807727 wikiPageWikiLink Q192334.
- Q7807727 wikiPageWikiLink Q30.
- Q7807727 wikiPageWikiLink Q3098948.
- Q7807727 wikiPageWikiLink Q362.
- Q7807727 wikiPageWikiLink Q4412061.
- Q7807727 wikiPageWikiLink Q49042.
- Q7807727 wikiPageWikiLink Q5004166.
- Q7807727 wikiPageWikiLink Q671812.
- Q7807727 wikiPageWikiLink Q7156632.
- Q7807727 wikiPageWikiLink Q7387139.
- Q7807727 wikiPageWikiLink Q7865230.
- Q7807727 wikiPageWikiLink Q8033840.
- Q7807727 wikiPageWikiLink Q8369062.
- Q7807727 wikiPageWikiLink Q8369767.
- Q7807727 wikiPageWikiLink Q8682572.
- Q7807727 wikiPageWikiLink Q941898.
- Q7807727 architect "Bard-Knox Company, Pittsburgh, Pa., United States".
- Q7807727 brokeGround "1921".
- Q7807727 constructionCost "54482.45".
- Q7807727 location "South Road, Chapel Hill, N.C., United States".
- Q7807727 owner Q192334.
- Q7807727 stadiumName "The Tin Can".
- Q7807727 tenants "North Carolina Tar Heels 1924-38".
- Q7807727 point "35.909166666666664 -79.04694444444445".
- Q7807727 type Place.
- Q7807727 type StadiumOrArena.
- Q7807727 type ArchitecturalStructure.
- Q7807727 type Location.
- Q7807727 type Place.
- Q7807727 type SportFacility.
- Q7807727 type Stadium.
- Q7807727 type Thing.
- Q7807727 type SpatialThing.
- Q7807727 comment "Officially named the Indoor Athletic Center (or Court), the Tin Can was the home of North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball from the 1924 season until the team's relocation to the Woollen Gymnasium in 1938.".
- Q7807727 label "Tin Can (basketball arena)".
- Q7807727 lat "35.909166666666664".
- Q7807727 long "-79.04694444444445".
- Q7807727 name "The Tin Can".