A Wyoming wordsmith thought heâd seen it all until the University of Wyoming announced a plan to build vomitories at War Memorial Stadium in Laramie. Â
âHaving been to UW games since 1967 â and seen it all there â I assumed the writer was jokingly referring to restrooms and what some fans do at the game,â Kevin Bohnenblust, a longtime communications expert who lives outside Cheyenne, joked Wednesday in a Facebook post. Â
Bohnenblust told Cowboy State Daily on Thursday that heâd been casually scrolling through a KGAB news story about UWâs plan to update the UW football stadium when the incongruous architectural term caught his eye. Â
âTurns out that âvomitoryâ is a correct word for a passage âwhere masses of people are disgorged,ââ Bohnenblust said, adding, âThat by itself sounds gross.â Â
Bohnenblust noted that for years, people spread rumors about the âvomitoriaâ of ancient Rome being areas used to barf out food so the Romans could continue eating. But thatâs a myth, he said. Â
History.com agrees, noting that the zones did exist, but they were for âvomitingâ â or expelling â people, not venison sacrificed to the gods. Â
The vomitoria at the Colosseum in Rome were so efficiently designed, the site says, they could spew 50,000 people into the arena in just 15 minutes. Â
Architect On Bodily FunctionsÂ
Even though heâs designed several multimillion-dollar buildings and was the architect of record on UWâs Gateway Building, State Sen. Stephan Pappas, R-Cheyenne, said he didnât usually reference vomitories in his designs. Â
Now retired, Pappas said he might call the zones exit corridors instead, which only lands him back in the belly of Latin terms for bodily actions.
âCorridorâ comes from the Latin word for ârun.â Â
The English word âspew,â meanwhile, translates to the Latin verb âvomÄre,â which is almost elegant-sounding enough to shed its pungent connotations.
Almost. Â
âTo vomit is to expel,â said Pappas. âSo, they werenât thinking of vomit in terms of how we were thinking of vomit, the actual substance we throw up.â Â
Pappas noted that vomitories are specific to arenas âsports stadiums, theaters â places that puke out humans quickly. Â
But the exits are just called exits in places like stores and hospitals that merely dribble, hock or drool humans out. Â
There are many architectural terms that sound unfamiliar to laymen, said Pappas, but offhand he couldnât think of any quite as startling.

Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.




