<p>i heard uc davis has the best one from my cousin but i dont know if she is right. can anyone tell me anything about the gyms at uci, uc davis, ucla, ucsd, ucla, and uc berkeley?</p>
<p>people here other than me dont seem to go to gyms (jk). But to answer your question all large state universities are going to have nice gyms.</p>
<p>yeah but which UC has the BEST one?</p>
<p>on what basis
most equipment
nicest/newest equipment
largest facility
etc</p>
<p>on anything.</p>
<p>thats going to be completely based on opinion if you live in California (which im assuming you do) why not visit them and decide for yourself.</p>
<p>damn man do you know or not?</p>
<p>no not really im from michigan, i was just trying to be helpful sorry</p>
<p>^ its ok ughhh. does anyone know which uc has the best gym??</p>
<p>I would think UCLA because it's easily the best UC in terms of athletics</p>
<p>UCLA has excellent fitness facilities</p>
<p>I third UCLA. When the Wooden Center was completed in 1983, it provided really excellent fitness facilities open to all students. I can't imagine any other UC would have the equivalent of the Wooden Center.</p>
<p>I did not even know about the "Fit Center" you posted a link to. Here is a link to the specific conditioning at the Wooden Center:</p>
<p>Weight Rooms at Wooden Center --UCLA</a> Recreation Information</p>
<p>If someone is really using gym quality as a factor in deciding what colleges to apply to, he or she most likely will not get into UCLA. Just saying.</p>
<p>Students do not use the same gym as varsity athletes, and gym quality does not correlate at all with varsity athletic success. Best of luck.</p>
<p>^ totally useless post. i asked which UC has best gym and you give me some bull crap answer.</p>
<p>UCSD's RIMAC gym bests UCLA's any day of the week. The Wooden Center, while decent, really is fairly disappointing given the reputation of UCLA athletics.</p>
<p>I'm not gonna be judging you 3365 but you could treat other CCers with more respect. Most of the people here are trying to help you.
That being said, I would second UCSD's recreational center..</p>
<p>
[quote]
Students do not use the same gym as varsity athletes, and gym quality does not correlate at all with varsity athletic success. Best of luck.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Umm, yes it does. A sports powerhouse school is more inclined to put money into athletic facilities than a school less known for its sports.</p>
<p>mandolive i understand where you are coming from but it annoys me whenever i ask someone a question and that person gives me an answer i am not seeking. what if you asked your math teacher for help on how to do something and your math teacher starts randomly talking about how you need to learn to do math problems on your own without his or her help?</p>
<p>Berkeley's trying to build a new gym for its varsity athletes... It is only to be used by athletes though.</p>
<p>Student-Athlete</a> High Performance Center Designs- The Campaign for Student-Athletes</p>
<p>It will be built as soon as the university settles a long contested lawsuit with the city of Berkeley and the treetards.</p>
<p>July 17th is the court date hearing for the injunction to be lifted... After that... TIMBERRRRR! </p>
<p><em>Or so I hope</em></p>
<p>Cal's RSF is decent.
UC</a> Berkeley Recreational Sports: Facilities</p>
<p>The Hearst Gym has a nice historic marble pool.</p>