Nick Saban, Miss Terry celebrate milestone for new Tuscaloosa center

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Nick and Terry Saban were on site in Tuscaloosa as the Saban Center marked a major construction milestone with a ceremonial beam signing. The 118,000‑square‑foot STEM and arts learning campus is being built along the Black Warrior River on a 7.7‑acre site in the River District, with a design that includes locally sourced Alabama marble. Supported through a public‑private partnership that includes the State of Alabama, the center is expected to open in 2027 and serve as a statewide hub for hands‑on learning and workforce development. (Photos courtesy of the Saban Center)Renderings show what  the 118,000-square-foot Saban Center, designed by architecture firm Steinberg Hart, is going to look like when complete. The 118,000‑square‑foot STEM and arts learning campus is being built along the Black Warrior River on a 7.7‑acre site in the River District, with a design that includes locally sourced Alabama marble. Supported through a public‑private partnership that includes the State of Alabama, the center is expected to open in 2027 and serve as a statewide hub for hands‑on learning and workforce development. (Photos courtesy of the Saban Center) Nick and Terry Saban were on site in Tuscaloosa as the Saban Center marked a major construction milestone with a ceremonial beam signing. The 118,000‑square‑foot STEM and arts learning campus is being built along the Black Warrior River on a 7.7‑acre site in the River District, with a design that includes locally sourced Alabama marble. Supported through a public‑private partnership that includes the State of Alabama, the center is expected to open in 2027 and serve as a statewide hub for hands‑on learning and workforce development. (Photos courtesy of the Saban Center)Nick and Terry Saban were on site in Tuscaloosa as the Saban Center marked a major construction milestone with a ceremonial beam signing. The 118,000‑square‑foot STEM and arts learning campus is being built along the Black Warrior River on a 7.7‑acre site in the River District, with a design that includes locally sourced Alabama marble. Supported through a public‑private partnership that includes the State of Alabama, the center is expected to open in 2027 and serve as a statewide hub for hands‑on learning and workforce development. (Photos courtesy of the Saban Center)Nick and Terry Saban were on site in Tuscaloosa as the Saban Center marked a major construction milestone with a ceremonial beam signing. The 118,000‑square‑foot STEM and arts learning campus is being built along the Black Warrior River on a 7.7‑acre site in the River District, with a design that includes locally sourced Alabama marble. Supported through a public‑private partnership that includes the State of Alabama, the center is expected to open in 2027 and serve as a statewide hub for hands‑on learning and workforce development. (Photos courtesy of the Saban Center)Nick and Terry Saban were on site in Tuscaloosa as the Saban Center marked a major construction milestone with a ceremonial beam signing. The 118,000‑square‑foot STEM and arts learning campus is being built along the Black Warrior River on a 7.7‑acre site in the River District, with a design that includes locally sourced Alabama marble. Supported through a public‑private partnership that includes the State of Alabama, the center is expected to open in 2027 and serve as a statewide hub for hands‑on learning and workforce development. (Photos courtesy of the Saban Center)Nick and Terry Saban were on site in Tuscaloosa as the Saban Center marked a major construction milestone with a ceremonial beam signing. The 118,000‑square‑foot STEM and arts learning campus is being built along the Black Warrior River on a 7.7‑acre site in the River District, with a design that includes locally sourced Alabama marble. Supported through a public‑private partnership that includes the State of Alabama, the center is expected to open in 2027 and serve as a statewide hub for hands‑on learning and workforce development. (Photos courtesy of the Saban Center)Nick and Terry Saban were on site in Tuscaloosa as the Saban Center marked a major construction milestone with a ceremonial beam signing. The 118,000‑square‑foot STEM and arts learning campus is being built along the Black Warrior River on a 7.7‑acre site in the River District, with a design that includes locally sourced Alabama marble. Supported through a public‑private partnership that includes the State of Alabama, the center is expected to open in 2027 and serve as a statewide hub for hands‑on learning and workforce development. (Photos courtesy of the Saban Center)Nick and Terry Saban were on site in Tuscaloosa as the Saban Center marked a major construction milestone with a ceremonial beam signing. The 118,000‑square‑foot STEM and arts learning campus is being built along the Black Warrior River on a 7.7‑acre site in the River District, with a design that includes locally sourced Alabama marble. Supported through a public‑private partnership that includes the State of Alabama, the center is expected to open in 2027 and serve as a statewide hub for hands‑on learning and workforce development. (Photos courtesy of the Saban Center)Nick and Terry Saban were on site in Tuscaloosa as the Saban Center marked a major construction milestone with a ceremonial beam signing. The 118,000‑square‑foot STEM and arts learning campus is being built along the Black Warrior River on a 7.7‑acre site in the River District, with a design that includes locally sourced Alabama marble. Supported through a public‑private partnership that includes the State of Alabama, the center is expected to open in 2027 and serve as a statewide hub for hands‑on learning and workforce development. (Photos courtesy of the Saban Center)Renderings show what  the 118,000-square-foot Saban Center, designed by architecture firm Steinberg Hart, is going to look like when complete. The 118,000‑square‑foot STEM and arts learning campus is being built along the Black Warrior River on a 7.7‑acre site in the River District, with a design that includes locally sourced Alabama marble. Supported through a public‑private partnership that includes the State of Alabama, the center is expected to open in 2027 and serve as a statewide hub for hands‑on learning and workforce development. (Photos courtesy of the Saban Center) Renderings show what  the 118,000-square-foot Saban Center, designed by architecture firm Steinberg Hart, is going to look like when complete. The 118,000‑square‑foot STEM and arts learning campus is being built along the Black Warrior River on a 7.7‑acre site in the River District, with a design that includes locally sourced Alabama marble. Supported through a public‑private partnership that includes the State of Alabama, the center is expected to open in 2027 and serve as a statewide hub for hands‑on learning and workforce development. (Photos courtesy of the Saban Center)

Nick and Terry Saban have been making regular Sunday drives to the site of their namesake Saban Center in Tuscaloosa to check on its progress.

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