Tag Archives: Wellness Center

TSU Celebrates Grand Reopening of Ralph H. Boston Wellness Center

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (TSU News Service) – Tennessee State University celebrated the grand reopening of the Ralph H. Boston Wellness Center, unveiling a modernized fitness and wellness hub designed to serve students, faculty, and staff.

The renovated facility now boasts upgraded equipment, fresh interior design, and new amenities for students, faculty, and staff. University leaders, staff, and students gathered for a celebratory ribbon-cutting and tour, marking the reopening as a symbol of progress and prioritization of student well-being.

TSU President Dwayne Tucker, center, Director of the Wellness Dr. Gerald Davis, faculty and staff join students for the a wellness center celebratory ribbon-cutting.

“This is a joyous occasion,” said Leah Granderson, executive director for campus operations planning, design, and construction. “Thank you for celebrating this new amenity. It’s more than a gym, it’s a reflection of TSU’s commitment to our campus community.”

Joining Granderson was Marlah Green, assistant director of renovation in Facilities Management, who expressed pride in the transformation. “I was the project manager that originally built this facility in the late ‘90s,” Green said. “To see it renovated, refreshed, and filled with new equipment is really a joy.”

For Amber Long, a senior architectural engineering major from Memphis, TN, the updates make a real difference. “When I walked in, it was very nice and updated,” she said. “It definitely motivates me to get up and go to the gym now.”

TSU student Amber Long lifts weights in the newly renovated Ralph H. Boston Wellness Center.

TSU President Dwyane Tucker praised the collaborative effort. “What a great job everybody did to pull this together,” he said. “From what I understand, even during the soft opening, students showed up in great demand. They see the opportunity too.”

That demand reflects a broader vision articulated by Dr. Gerald Davis, Director of the Wellness Center. “This center is more than a place to break a sweat. It’s a place to build community, confidence, and connection,” Davis said. “As part of Student Affairs, it’s our role to support the whole student. Not just academically, but emotionally and socially as well.”

The renovation was made possible by Title III funding, with critical planning completed in just four days before the close of the 2024 fiscal year. “I already knew what the students had been asking for,” Davis explained. “We strategically blended brand new equipment with usable existing pieces and donated others to Residence Life and Athletics.”

The revitalized center features nearly 50 pieces of fitness equipment, an expanded workout space, and a unique relaxation and stretching zone which Davis hopes to formally name down the road.

Dr. Gerald Davis

Access is open to students, faculty, staff, alumni, and even visiting family members accompanied by a student. In the near future, Davis plans to roll out new features including student ID-based entry systems, hygiene stations, expanded hours, and programming such as yoga and high-intensity interval training (HIIT)

Aiden Smith, a junior business management and marketing major from Houston, TX, hopes to see more interactive opportunities emerge. “Yoga or boxing classes would be great to get students and faculty more engaged,” Smith said. As a student project planning engineer with Campus Operations, he also underscored the value of student input. “We actively use student engagement to shape renovations and new projects on campus. It’s crucial to the TSU experience.”

TSU student Aiden Smith powers through a bench press in the newly renovated Ralph H. Boston Wellness Center. The modernized facility includes nearly 50 new machines.

Will Radford, Assistant Vice President of Planning, Design, and Construction, who helps lead the university’s capital projects and campus improvements, echoed that sentiment. “Every day, we organize around the needs of our students,” he said. “We’re continuing the legacy of TSU but also building a culture of celebrating student services and pushing forward creative solutions.”

As the center reopens, Dr. Davis remains focused on spreading the word. “It surprises me when graduating students say they didn’t even know we had a Wellness Center,” he said. “That tells me we need to do better—not just promoting this space but getting students out of their rooms and helping them connect.”

During the ceremony Marlah Green, assistant director of renovation in Facilities Management, expressed pride in the wellness center transformation.

Whether it’s a freshman stepping into a gym for the first time or a senior rediscovering community, the Ralph H. Boston Wellness Center is more than just a renovated facility, it’s a renewed promise to the TSU community.

The Wellness Center is open Monday-Thursday 8 a.m.- 9 p.m.; Friday 8 a.m.- 8 p.m.; Sunday 1 – 4 p.m. The center is not open on Saturdays at the moment.

For updates and programming announcements, follow @Wellness_TSU on Instagram. To learn more, visit www.tnstate.edu/wellness_center/.

TSU Partners With Man Up Health Collaborative to Promote Men’s Health

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (TSU News Service) – Tennessee State University is partnering with the Man Up Health Collaborative and Mt. Zion Baptist Church to bring awareness to issues surrounding men’s health.

Members of the health collaborative, which grew out of the Men’s Health Ministry at Mt. Zion, met with TSU staff members last week to discuss plans for a new project called the Summer Men’s Health Series.

The series, which will include a One Million Steps in 100 Days campaign, kicked off June 2 with a Man-Up Men’s Health Symposium at Mt. Zion’s Antioch location and will culminate on Sept. 8 with a 5K walk/run at Tennessee State University.

Gerald Davis, TSU director of Intramural Sports and the Ralph H. Boston Wellness Center, said initiatives like this one are needed to encourage men to adopt healthier lifestyles.

Gerald Davis, TSU director of Intramural Sports and the Ralph H. Boston Wellness Center

“Most guys have this negative stigma about working out,” Davis said. “They think it’s all about getting bigger, stronger and faster, but when you are in your 40s and 50s, it’s just about maintaining wellness, just wanting to be in shape and do things longer without getting tired.”

Dr. Dedrick E. Moulton, associate professor of Pediatrics at the Vanderbilt Medical Center and the driving force behind the effort, said the project grew out of his personal struggle to live a healthier life.

“Men don’t tend to pay much attention to their health. They will find almost anything else to do to avoid taking care of it, and I most certainly fell into that same category despite being a medical professional,” Moulton said. “What we are really looking to do is let men know that when they choose to neglect their health, it impacts more than just them. It impacts their families, their wives, their children and all their loved ones.”

Moulton said the collaborative seeks to become a “resource bank” for men hoping to live healthier lives. He said the symposium on Saturday will include blood pressure and diabetes screenings as well as interactive sessions focused on mental health and stress management, fitness and nutrition, cardiology and heart health, and developing a health checklist.

“If you attend the symposium you will see that following the medical presentation, we will have real people who will tell you how they had diagnoses and made changes,” he said. “Then we will even follow that up with fitness experts and tell you how to get started.”

According to Moulton, the One Million Steps in 100 Days campaign is based on the American Heart Association’s recommendation for people to take10,000 steps a day. He said the collaborative is encouraging men throughout Nashville to participate, especially men who attend Mt. Zion or work at TSU.

While Davis said making health changes is about taking slow steps and setting realistic goals, he also said men need to make health a priority and get sound advice, which he and his staff are ready to provide to members of the TSU community.

“It’s about challenging yourself. If you go to work at 8 a.m., you may have to get up at 5 a.m., get everybody together, come on in workout, shower and then leave,” he said. “Everybody is looking for that perfect box to fit in work and working out, but sometimes it just doesn’t work that way. Take a lunch break. Do it right after work. But you have got to get into a habit of doing something for your body. If not, nine times out of 10, it will come back and catch up with you.”

Davis recommended the walking/running tracks at the Hadley Park Regional Center for people who are not students or employees at the university. He said in the near future he hopes to make the wellness center available to family members of TSU employees as well as alumni.

Moulton said the group hopes men will bring their families to participate in the 5K walk/run scheduled for Sept. 8.

“It is more than just men that we are seeking to run,” he said. “We want men to run with their kids and their wives. And if you can’t run, walk with them.”

For more information about the Man Up Health Collaborative and the Summer Men’s Health Series, contact Dr. Dedrick Moulton at [email protected].

Department of Media Relations

Tennessee State University
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Nashville, Tennessee 37209
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About Tennessee State University

With more than 8,000 students, Tennessee State University is Nashville’s only public university, and is a comprehensive, urban, co-educational, land-grant university offering 38 bachelor’s degree programs, 25 master’s degree programs and seven doctoral degrees. TSU has earned a top 20 ranking for Historically Black Colleges and Universities according to U.S. News and World Report, and rated as one of the top universities in the country by Washington Monthly for social mobility, research and community service. Founded in 1912, Tennessee State University celebrated 100 years in Nashville during 2012. Visit the University online at tnstate.edu.