Blandford Park

Last updated

New Zealand marching girls at Blandford Park in the 1940s or 1950s Marching girls at Blandford Park (cropped).jpg
New Zealand marching girls at Blandford Park in the 1940s or 1950s
Aerial view of the razing of Blandford Park in the Grafton Gully in 1966 Blandford Park site, Grafton Gully, Auckland (cropped).jpg
Aerial view of the razing of Blandford Park in the Grafton Gully in 1966

Blandford Park, in Auckland, New Zealand, was the home of association football in Auckland for much of the 20th century, and one of the country's main football grounds. Located in Grafton Gully, northeast of Grafton Bridge, roughly between the northern part of Whitaker Place and the Auckland Bowls Club in Grafton Mews, it was razed in the mid-1960s, and its site is now occupied by on- and off-ramps to the Auckland Central Motorway Junction. [1]

The ground hosted a considerable number of notable football matches, including several international fixtures [1] and many of the Auckland regional finals and national semi-finals of the Chatham Cup.

Originally owned by Morgan Blandford (for whom it is named), the park was in existence at least as early as 1913. In 1923, Blandford leased the park to the Auckland Football Association for a period of 30 years, with an option to buy outright after that point. The park was unappealing at the time, with contemporary reports noting that it was swampy and seemed to be a general dumping ground.

Over the course of the next two years, the AFA attempted to transform the park, clearing the land and adding terraces which could accommodate several thousand spectators. The park had easy access from Grafton Bridge and was handy to most of the city's main tram lines. The ground was officially opened in mid 1925.

The marshiness of the ground was, however, still a major problem, [2] and could not be easily remedied. The ground was located in a low-lying basin with considerable run-off from the surrounding hills. The situation was not helped by the AFA's decision to offer a 30-year sub-lease of the ground during football's off-season to another group, the Stadium Company. This group began to run cycling competitions at the ground, adding to the disrepair of the surface. Despite legal wrangles between the AFA and the Stadium Company, in which the AFA tried to terminate the sub-lease, the ground deterioration continued, with cycling, [3] and later speedway [4] still being run at the park. Other sports played at the park included softball, [5] and the ground was the home of the Grafton Cricket Club.

During the late 1940s, the AFA tried to negotiate with the Auckland City Council for the purchase of the park after the AFA lease expired. The council considered the offer but found that there were numerous problems: the ground was of an unsuitable size for most public sporting uses, its drainage problems still persisted, and - with the increase in private motor vehicle use - its lack of parking space was considered a distinct disadvantage. It was also noted at the time that the whole of the Grafton Gully area was likely to be needed for motorway use at some point in the not-too-distant future. In the end a compromise was reached, with the Auckland City Council acquiring the lease on the park and sub-letting it to the AFA.

After a legal wrangle with the park's owners, the park became council property in 1953, earmarked for roading purposes. The AFA continued to use the ground as its headquarters until 1964, when it moved to Newmarket Park. With the building of the motorway the park initially became a dumping ground for quarried spoil before being buried beneath part of the motorway itself.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Māngere Bridge (bridges)</span> Bridge in New Zealand

Māngere Bridge, officially also called the Manukau Harbour Crossing, is a dual motorway bridge over the Manukau Harbour in south-western Auckland, New Zealand, crossing between the suburb also known as Māngere Bridge and the suburb of Onehunga.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eden Terrace</span> Suburb in Auckland, New Zealand

Eden Terrace is an inner city suburb of Auckland, located 2 km south of the Auckland CBD, in the North Island of New Zealand. Eden Terrace is one of Auckland's oldest suburbs, and also one of the smallest.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Newton, New Zealand</span> Suburb in Auckland, New Zealand

Newton is a small suburb of Auckland, New Zealand, under the local governance of the Auckland Council.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Central Motorway Junction</span> Road junction in New Zealand

The Central Motorway Junction or CMJ, is the intersection of State Highways 1 and 16, just south of the central business district of Auckland. A multilevel structure, it has been described as a "fiendishly complicated, multi-layered puzzle of concrete, steel and asphalt". Carrying around 200,000 vehicles a day, it is one of the busiest stretches of road in New Zealand.

Carlaw Park was a multi-purpose stadium in Parnell, a central suburb of Auckland, New Zealand. It neighboured the Auckland Domain's Northern end. It was primarily used for rugby league and had a peak spectator capacity of around 28,000 in the 1930s, though this fell to around 17,000 by the time the ground was closed in 2002. It is now the site of several offices and the University of Auckland's largest student accommodation Carlaw Park Student Village.

Transport in Auckland, New Zealand's largest city, is defined by factors that include the shape of the Auckland isthmus, the suburban character of much of the urban area, a history of focusing investment on roading projects rather than public transport, and high car-ownership rates.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Grafton Gully</span>

Grafton Gully is a deep and very wide gully running northwards towards the sea through the volcanic hills of the Auckland volcanic field in New Zealand. It divides the CBD from the suburbs of Grafton and Parnell in the east.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Auckland Northern Motorway</span> Motorway located in Auckland, New Zealand

The Auckland Northern Motorway in the Auckland Region of New Zealand links Central Auckland and Warkworth in the former Rodney District via the Hibiscus Coast and North Shore. It is part of State Highway 1.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Victoria Park, Auckland</span> Park in Auckland, New Zealand

Victoria Park is a park and sports ground in the Auckland city centre, New Zealand. It was opened in 1905 and named after the queen who had died four years earlier. It lies on reclaimed bay land in Freemans Bay, a suburb directly west of the Auckland CBD. However, it does not have direct connection to the foreshore anymore, as the Western Reclamation and the Viaduct Basin quarter lie between it and the Waitematā Harbour. The bay started to be filled in as early as the 1870s although the bulk of the reclamation appears to have happened after 1901. The Park was 'finished' around 1912, the area to the north dates from after that.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Victoria Park Viaduct</span> Major motorway viaduct in Auckland, New Zealand

The Victoria Park Viaduct is a major motorway viaduct carrying the Auckland Northern Motorway over the Victoria Park area in the Auckland city centre, New Zealand. Construction began in 1959, and the bridge was opened on 5 April 1962. Due to the high traffic volumes passing through on their way to and from North Shore City, and because the viaduct is only four lanes wide in total, the bridge over the park is considered "one of the country's worst traffic bottlenecks", with around 200,000 vehicles a day.

The 1928 Chatham Cup was the sixth annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Northwestern Cycleway</span> Cycle route in Auckland, New Zealand

The Northwestern Cycleway, sometimes also referred to as the North West or Northwestern Cycle Route, is a 12 km mostly off-road cycle route in New Zealand that connects the Auckland CBD with the suburb of Westgate. For most of its length, it runs alongside the Northwestern Motorway.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Waikaraka Cycleway</span> Cycle route in Auckland, New Zealand

The Waikaraka Cycleway is an off-road cycleway in the south of the Auckland isthmus, New Zealand, running from the suburb of Wesley along New Zealand State Highway 20 to Onehunga and then continuing along the shoreline of the Manukau Harbour beside mostly industrialised areas until it ends at Hugo Johnston Drive, in Southdown.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Te Hopua a Rangi</span> Volcano in Auckland, New Zealand

Te Hopua a Rangi, also known as Gloucester Park, is one of the volcanoes in the Auckland volcanic field in Auckland, New Zealand, and is located in Onehunga. Its 300 m wide, sediment-filled explosion (maar) crater was used as a boat harbour in early European times and known first as Onehunga Basin then as Geddes Basin. It was reclaimed in the 1930s and named Gloucester Park in 1935 after the visit to New Zealand by the Duke of Gloucester in that year. From 1975 into the early 1980s the Southwestern Motorway was built right through the middle of the park and crater. The southern side was turned into a sports ground, and the western side as a wetland with activity space for Aotea Sea Scouts who took ownership of the Manukau Yacht and Motor Boat Club (MYMBC) club house in 1977.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cemetery Crater</span>

Cemetery Crater is one of the volcanoes in the Auckland volcanic field. It is an explosion crater roughly 200 metres (660 ft) wide, located east of Crater Hill. Hard to see even in early aerial photos due to its shallowness, it is now covered by housing.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Newmarket Park</span>

Newmarket Park is an approximately 6-hectare-large (15-acre) park in Auckland, New Zealand. It is located in the triangle between three suburbs, northeast of the Newmarket, southeast of Parnell and northwest of Remuera. It is located partially on a higher, man-made plateau, with the remainder of the park dropping steeply down towards Newmarket Stream running to Hobson Bay along the eastern edge of the park. In the early 2010s, a major remediation and upgrade of the park occurred.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Grafton United Cricket Club</span> New Zealand cricket club

Grafton United Cricket Club is one of New Zealand's oldest and largest cricket clubs, catering for around 700 senior members and 600 juniors from its clubrooms at Victoria Park, in central Auckland.

Grafton Volcano is a buried volcano in New Zealand's Auckland volcanic field that underlies much of the Auckland suburb of Grafton. First recognised in 2010, it includes the Outhwaite Park scoria cone that was first mapped by Hochstetter (1864) and inferred by later geologists to be a late phase vent of adjacent Pukekawa Volcano. Borehole drilling and building excavations in the Grafton-Auckland Domain area during the 1990s and 2000s provided new subsurface geological information that allowed geologists to recognise the buried Grafton Volcano.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nelson Street Cycleway</span> Cycle route in Auckland, New Zealand

The Nelson Street Cycleway is a cycleway in Auckland, New Zealand. The most well-known section of the path is Te Ara I Whiti, translated as, and commonly known as Lightpath. The cycleway then continues on to the Nelson Street arterial road into the City Centre.

The Strand is a street in Auckland, New Zealand's most populous city. It connects the Ports of Auckland to the Auckland motorway network, and is the eastern end of State Highway 16.

References

  1. 1 2 Pearce, Bob (5 October 2005). "Soccer: When Auckland could thrash pride of Austria". The New Zealand Herald . Retrieved 3 January 2011.
  2. "Papers Past Evening Post 6 April 1936 "JUST A MUD POOL"". Archived from the original on 5 October 2012. Retrieved 24 March 2015.
  3. Kennett, J.; Wall, B. (2005). New Zealand Cycling Legends 01 - Phil O'Shea - Wizard on wheels. Kennett Brothers. ISBN   9780958349086 . Retrieved 24 March 2015.
  4. "BLANDFORD PARK". historicspeedway.co.nz. Retrieved 24 March 2015.
  5. "Sportsground.co.nz - Easiest, smartest, fastest" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2015.

36°51′18″S174°46′13″E / 36.8550°S 174.7703°E / -36.8550; 174.7703