Skip to content
Tampa Bay Business & Wealth

Tampa Bay Business & Wealth

Primary Menu
  • News
  • Real Estate
  • Retail
  • Sports
  • Policy
  • Tech
  • Insights
  • PodcastsWatch TBBW | Tampa Bay Business Videos, Interviews & Stories
  • Events
  • Magazine
  • About TBBW
    • Meet TBBW’s Team
    • Contact
    • Advertising with Tampa Bay Business & Wealth
Newsletter
  • Home
  • 2025
  • October
  • 24
  • Academy of the Holy Names plans $8.2M South Tampa expansion

Academy of the Holy Names plans $8.2M South Tampa expansion

The Academy of the Holy Names is investing $8.2 million in a new Health and Wellness Center at its South Tampa campus.
Chuck Merlis October 28, 2025

The Academy of the Holy Names is expanding its South Tampa campus with an $8.2 million Health and Wellness Center.

Founded in 1881 by the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary, the school filed plans with the City of Tampa to add a 6,641 square foot athletic and training space at its MacDill Avenue athletics complex, part of the Academy’s main campus on Bayshore Boulevard.

The project continues the Academy’s long-standing commitment to developing the whole person through education, faith and fitness.

What we know

Records show the Academy is building a two-story Health and Wellness Center at 3319 S. MacDill Ave. The project will add classrooms, training areas and restrooms, along with new mechanical, electrical and fire protection systems.

READ: Tampa City Council approves massive observation wheel for Channelside

Tampa-based Ellison Construction is serving as the general contractor, and Wannemacher Jensen Architects is serving as the project’s architecture firm. Vickstrom Engineering Services is handling civil engineering. The project supports the Academy’s 2023-2028 strategic plan, which prioritizes student well-being, leadership and community engagement.

The Academy of the Holy Names athletic field and arts center in South Tampa, photographed from the soccer field under clear skies.
The Academy of the Holy Names athletic field and arts center in South Tampa. The private Catholic school plans to expand its MacDill Avenue complex with a new $8.2 million Health and Wellness Center.

What’s happening now

The expansion will serve both academic and athletic programs, including the school’s championship swim and dive team. Plans show the facility will include modernized fitness areas, classrooms and will expand the existing athletic building along MacDill Avenue. 

The Academy’s athletics program fields 13 high school sports with 15 teams and 9 middle school sports with 18 teams, earning local, regional and national recognition, according to its website.

Its swim and dive team has won three consecutive state titles —the only girls program in Hillsborough County history to do so —along with 17 straight district and 15 straight region championships. The school’s teams and student-athletes have also received national honors in lacrosse and other sports.

What this means for Tampa Bay

The project underscores how private schools and nonprofits are shaping the region’s development landscape. Institutional projects like this one create local jobs, strengthen the construction pipeline and reflect ongoing investment in Tampa’s educational infrastructure.

READ: Investors snap up West Tampa Pollo Campero for $3M

For the Academy, it marks another step in a 144-year legacy of growth. The new center supports 13 high school sports and 15 competitive teams and reflects a continued emphasis on health and leadership as central parts of student life.

Why it matters

As South Tampa continues to attract reinvestment, projects tied to education and wellness help sustain neighborhood vitality. The Academy’s expansion shows how long-established institutions are adapting to modern expectations while maintaining the values that built their reputations.

Looking ahead

Completion of the new facility will enhance the Academy’s ability to serve more than 1,000 students each year. It aligns with the school’s motto — “Esse Quam Videri,” meaning “To be, rather than to seem” — by turning a century-old mission into a modern facility that supports mind, body and spirit.

READ: Meet the Tampa firm teaching NFL players life after football

What we don’t know

The Academy of the Holy Names did not respond to a request for comment. The Academy has not released renderings or public statements regarding the project’s design or timeline. No information is available on the expected completion date or potential community access to the new facility. Details such as the size of individual training areas, planned technology features and sustainability elements were not included in city filings.

The front entrance of the Academy of the Holy Names on Bayshore Boulevard in South Tampa, framed by palm trees and morning light.

Stay Connected

Sign up for TBBW’s newsletter

Follow TBBW on social media

Read more TBBW stories

Post navigation

Previous: Tampa City Council approves massive observation wheel for Channelside
Next: Downtown St. Pete’s EVO nears capacity with health-focused tenants

Latest

Consultant selection begins for Sarasota downtown master plan 1

Consultant selection begins for Sarasota downtown master plan

March 27, 2026
Staffing costs rise in St. Petersburg as council weighs $2M increase 2

Staffing costs rise in St. Petersburg as council weighs $2M increase

March 27, 2026
Tampa entrepreneur Gary Hartfield enters mayor’s race 3

Tampa entrepreneur Gary Hartfield enters mayor’s race

March 27, 2026
Ritz-Carlton Tampa opens second tower on Bayshore Ritz-Carlton Tampa opens second tower on Bayshore 4

Ritz-Carlton Tampa opens second tower on Bayshore

March 26, 2026

Stay Connected

Facebook
X (Twitter)
YouTube
LinkedIn
Instagram

March Cover Story

Tampa Bay Business and Wealth Digital Magazine Cover Read

Read More

Hartfield,Gary

Tampa entrepreneur Gary Hartfield enters mayor’s race

Chuck Merlis March 27, 2026
Hartfield joins Tampa mayor race with focus on housing and small business.
Read More Read more about Tampa entrepreneur Gary Hartfield enters mayor’s race
BayCare to open first urgent care in Plant City BayCare Urgent Care facility exterior in Plant City with blue signage and parking lot

BayCare to open first urgent care in Plant City

March 25, 2026
Tampa startups say AI is changing how they hire businessman show virtual graphic of AI Technology

Tampa startups say AI is changing how they hire

March 23, 2026
Florida home insurance stabilizes as litigation drops 80%, insurer says Suburban Florida homes with tile roofs and palm trees in a residential neighborhood

Florida home insurance stabilizes as litigation drops 80%, insurer says

March 26, 2026

About TBBW

Tampa Bay Business & Wealth (TBBW) is the leading source of Tampa Bay business news, telling the stories behind the region’s biggest companies and the leaders shaping Tampa Bay’s economy.

We report on founders, CEOs and entrepreneurs whose decisions influence jobs, investment, development and long-term growth across the region.
Published daily online and monthly in print, TBBW delivers paywall free coverage with local context and editorial depth.

Our mission is to inform, explain and connect by putting people at the center of business reporting. We believe strong journalism helps business leaders make better decisions and helps communities understand how growth happens, who drives it and why it matters. Learn More

Newsletter

Subscribe to TBBW Newsletter

Stay Connected

Facebook
X (Twitter)
YouTube
LinkedIn
Instagram
  • 1901 Ulmerton Road, Suite 100
  • Clearwater 33762
  • (727)-860-8229

DIGITAL MAGAZINE

Tampa Bay Business and Wealth Digital Magazine Cover Open Digital Magazine
Copyright © 2026 All rights reserved. | MoreNews by AF themes.
Sign up for TBBW’s free newsletter!

Subscribe

* indicates required