Football Park
- "AAMI Stadium" redirects here. For the stadium in Melbourne known as "AAMI Park", see Melbourne Rectangular Stadium.
| Football Park | |
|---|---|
| AAMI Stadium | |
| Location | Turner Drive, West Lakes, South Australia |
| Coordinates | 34°52′48″S 138°29′44″E / 34.88°S 138.49556°ECoordinates: 34°52′48″S 138°29′44″E / 34.88°S 138.49556°E |
| Broke ground | 1971 |
| Opened | 1974 |
| Owner | SANFL |
| Operator | SANFL |
| Surface | Grass |
| Construction cost | A$6.6m |
| Architect | Various |
| Capacity | 51,515 |
| Field dimensions | Football: 165m x 135m |
| Tenants | |
| Adelaide Football Club (AFL) (1991-2013) Port Adelaide Football Club (AFL) (1997-2013) Woodville-West Torrens Eagles (SANFL) (1991-1992) |
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Football Park (currently also known by its sponsored name of AAMI Stadium) is an Australian rules football stadium located in West Lakes, a western suburb of Adelaide, South Australia. It was built in 1973 by the South Australian National Football League and opened in 1974 and is now the home ground of both the Adelaide Crows and Port Adelaide Power who play in the Australian Football League (AFL). With a seated capacity of 51,515 Football Park is the fourth largest Australian Rules Football stadium in Australia in terms of crowd capacity, behind Docklands Stadium in Melbourne (56,347), Stadium Australia in Sydney (81,500) and the Melbourne Cricket Ground (100,018).
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[edit] History
Football Park hosted its first football game, an SANFL match between Central District and North Adelaide, on 4 May 1974. The first goal was kicked by North's Barry Hearl but The Bulldogs won the game defeating The Roosters 21.13 (139) to 16.13 (109).
In addition to football, Football Park has also hosted cricket matches, including the Kerry Packer-run World Series Cricket competition of the late 1970s, International rules football and rock concerts. At present the only sport played at the ground is Australian rules football.
[edit] Transport
Football Park has a bus terminal for public buses from Adelaide and surrounding suburbs; approximately 1000 buses are in service to transport spectators to and from the stadium for football games. This service is known as the 'Footy Express'. For "Showdown" matches, when both of Adelaide's sides play against each other, the number of buses is doubled.
There is no railway line directly serving the site, but there have been plans to build a spur from the Grange line. The nearest station is Albert Park, but Seaton Park, East Grange and Grange are a similar distance from the stadium, roughly 2.5km.
[edit] Concerts
Major artists have held concerts at Football Park, including ABBA, Dire Straits, U2, The Rolling Stones and Robbie Williams.[1]
[edit] Highest attendances
| Three highest attended events | ||||
| Number | Event | Type | Attendance | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Robbie Williams | Concert | 80,000 | 5 December 2006 |
| 2 | Sturt v Port Adelaide | SANFL Grand Final | 66,897 | 28 September 1976 |
| 3 | U2 | Concert | 60,000 (approx) | 16 November 2006 |
The stadium has an absolute seated maximum capacity of 51,515 which equates to about 5% of the population of the Adelaide metropolitan area. Under the stadium's current configuration the record football attendance is 51,140 set on 26 April 2003 for Showdown XIII between the Crows and Power in Round 5 of the 2003 AFL season (Crows home game).
[edit] Upgrades
Since it was built, Football Park has had many additions including:
- In 1982 the outer concourse was completed during the SANFL season giving a limited number of permanent undercover seats. The stadium was also converted to an All-seater stadium with the installation of aluminium bench seating on the outer's lower deck.
- In 1984 the Light Towers were installed.
- In 1985 alcohol was banned from the seats. Alcohol could only be consumed in the bar areas. In 2009, this ban was removed.
- In 1997 the stadium opened new corporate facilities, with suites at the southern end of the ground.
- In 1998 the superscreen was added to the NE side of the ground.
- In 2001 the balcony upper level of seats was extended towards the Northern End of the ground giving an extra 7,000 seats to the stadium.
- In 2004 the existing aluminium bench seating on the lower deck was replaced with plastic bucket seats leaving seating capacity at 51,515.
- In 2007,
- The Sound System was upgraded with new plastic PA speakers installed all around the stadium.
- A new and louder siren was added.
- Another superscreen was installed at the Southern End of the ground to aid viewers sitting under the existing superscreen on the North East side of the ground.
- The existing main scoreboard is still used, but also started its use for advertising.
- New scoreboards were built under both superscreens.
- On June 1, 2008, Premier Mike Rann announced that the Government will provide $100 million to upgrade AAMI Stadium. Among the several options considered were:
- a Medallion Club on the eastern side roof,
- the members grandstand roof raised with 2,000 extra seats,
- better lighting and
- new umpires' change rooms.
- There was also a push to build a grandstand on the eastern side of the stadium (like the northern grandstand), bringing the capacity to around 60,000. From AdelaideNow polls, it appeared the majority of the general public preferred the construction of a new stadium, closer to the city, to host most sporting events.[2]
- As of 8 January 2009, it had been decided[by whom?] that AAMI Stadium would undergo redevelopment. Upgrades were to include
- better traffic flow to and from the stadium
- better public transport access to and from the stadium
- undercover walkways and concourses
- new seating throughout the stadium, with spectators in the first level as close as 10 metres (33 ft) to the playing field and 16 metres (52 ft) on the upper level
- new entrances, combined with more flowing concourses and walkways, which will reduce the time it takes spectators to travel to and from the stadium gates.[3]
[edit] Dimensions
The playing surface covers approximately 2 hectares, with the average distance between the boundary line and fence being 6 metres. The ground dimensions from fence to fence are 177 x 145 m (581 x 476 ft) and the playing area from the boundary lines is 165 x 135 m (541 x 442 ft) and the goals run north to south. There is also a drop of approximately 1.5m from the centre of the ground to the fence to help with drainage leaving the ground with a distinctive hump.
Local legend says the hump is actually from a grader that was left in the middle of the ground overnight during Football Park's construction. Legend has it that with the area still a swamp (the stadium was built on unused swamplands) the grader sunk into the ground and couldn't be removed.
[edit] External links
[edit] References
- ^ McDonald, Patrick (11 November 2006). "U2 to lead the charge". AdelaideNow. http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/story/0,22606,20737054-2682,00.html. Retrieved 28 January 2009.
- ^ Henderson, Nick; Humphreys, Bernard (3 June 2008). "Rann's AAMI upgrade rejected by the people". AdelaideNow. http://www.adelaidenow.com.au/ranns-aami-upgrade-rejected-by-the-people/story-fna7dq6e-1111116504449. Retrieved 28 January 2009.
- ^ Get the Facts
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