The Foundation has committed to a multi year project to build a new sports complex at Wits
The Wits Brian and Dorothy Zylstra Sports Complex is an integrated facility for training, research, and clinical practice.
The Complex promises world-class research and therapeutic facilities, an aquatics centre and a residence for elite athletes. A ground-breaking ceremony at the Wits Education Campus in Parktown, Johannesburg, on 4 May 2023 kicked off the envisaged state-of-the-art Wits Brian and Dorothy Zylstra Sports Complex.
The Sports Complex is a flagship Wits Centenary Project and will feature the Zylstra Sport and Health Building, the Zylstra Aquatics and Rowing Centre, and a 44-bed Zylstra Residence for elite athletes.
Construction is expected to be completed in 2026.
The Sports Complex is made possible by a R198 million legacy investment from the Zylstra family and the Skye Foundation.
Phil Zylstra, on behalf of the Zylstra family and the Skye Foundation, says: “We feel that the Wits Brian and Dorothy Zylstra Sports Complex will be a landmark building and a resource for not only Wits, but for the schools and sporting organisations from South Africa and abroad that will use it. It will be a fitting testament to my parents, Brian and Dorothy, and a sign of gratitude for the role the University played in many of our lives.”
Jon Patricios is Professor of Sport and Exercise Medicine at Wits and Director of Wits Sport and Health (WiSH). The Zylstra Sport and Health Building will house WiSH in future.
“This one-of-a-kind Sports Complex will usher in an exciting future for the next 100 years of Wits Sport and Health, servicing our greater Wits community through dynamic teaching, research, high performance training, and clinical practice,” says Patricios.
“Apart from providing our students with world-class sports facilities, it will serve as a hub for sporting events, both at the University and at national level. It will enable us to host inter-university, inter-school, and national tournaments, thereby bringing together athletes from across the country and promoting sportsmanship and healthy competition. Physical activity – as the most powerful tool we have for disease prevention and intervention – will also be brought more into focus and expand on existing research strengths in the Faculty of Health Sciences.”
WiSH is under the auspices of the School of Therapeutic Sciences in the Faculty of Health Sciences.
Head of School, Professor Hellen Myezwa says, “We will be able to develop the cross-disciplinary training and research focus areas in the various aspects of sport, sport physiology, sport injuries, and the use of exercise and movement in rehabilitation.”