Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Centre

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AIA Vitality Centre
Lexus centre.JPG
Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Centre
Former namesSwimming and Diving Stadium (1956)
Olympic Swimming Stadium (1957-83)
Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Centre (1983-98)
Lexus Centre (2004-10)
Westpac Centre (2010-15)
Holden Centre (2015-22)
LocationOlympic Blvd and Batman Ave
Olympic Park
Melbourne, VIC 3000
Australia
OwnerMelbourne & Olympic Parks Trust
Capacity 7,200 (1983-98)
5,500 (Original)
Construction
Broke groundOctober 1954
Opened22 November 1956 (1956-11-22)
Renovated1983, 2003, 2013
Construction cost £350,000
$10.5 million (1983 renovation)
$20 million (2003 renovation)
Architect Kevin Borland, Peter McIntyre and John and Phyllis Murphy
Structural engineerBill Irwin
General contractorMcDougall & Ireland
Tenants
1956 Olympic Games
North Melbourne Giants ( NBL) (1984-98)
Melbourne Tigers (NBL) (1984-91)
Eastside Spectres (NBL) (1987-91)
Southern Melbourne Saints (NBL) (1987-91)
Collingwood Football Club (Administration & Training facility) (2004-present)
Victorian Institute of Sport (Administration & Training facility) (2003-present)
Website
Venue Website

The Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Centre (originally known as the Swimming and Diving Stadium and now known commercially as the AIA Vitality Centre [1] ) is a sports administration and training facility located in the Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Precinct in Melbourne, Australia. The facility opened in 1956 as an aquatic centre for the 1956 Olympic Games. In 1983, the Olympic-sized pool was replaced with a parquetry floor and the facility became Melbourne's home of numerous basketball events until 1998, most notably as the home venue for several National Basketball League teams including the North Melbourne Giants and Melbourne Tigers. The venue served as Melbourne's primary indoor concert arena from 1984 to 1988, until completion of the Rod Laver Arena. In 1997, The Wiggles & their friends Captain Feathersword, Wags the Dog, Henry the Octopus, & Dorothy the Dinosaur performed here for The Wiggles Big Show which was considered lost media.

Contents

The centre is the administrative and training headquarters of the Collingwood Football Club and Netball Club, who also train on the adjacent Olympic Park Oval.

History

1956 Olympic Games

Known originally as the Swimming and Diving Stadium, it was built as an indoor aquatic centre for diving, swimming, water polo, and the swimming part of the modern pentathlon events for the 1956 Summer Olympics. [2] [3] It was the first fully indoor Olympic swimming venue in an Olympic Games and is the only major stadium structure from the 1956 Olympic Games with the facade intact. [2] It is listed on the Victorian Heritage Register. [4] The design of this building was the winner of one of three international competitions held in 1952 to provide stadia for the 1956 Olympic Games. [2] Architects Kevin Borland, Peter McIntyre, John and Phyllis Murphy and their engineer Bill Irwin won the only one of these competitions to be consummated. [2] Construction by McDougall & Ireland, one of Melbourne's then-largest construction companies, began in October 1954 and was completed in 1956, just prior to the commencement of the Melbourne Olympic Games. [2]

Artist Arthur Boyd created Totem Pole, the ceramic pylon sculptural work outside the complex, at his AMB Pottery in Murrumbeena.

Basketball

After redevelopment in the 1980s, the venue became the Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Centre. [4] It hosted home games for the National Basketball League's North Melbourne Giants, as well as the Melbourne Tigers, Eastside Spectres and Westside Melbourne Saints, as well as hosting international games between the Australian Boomers and various visiting international teams including the Soviet Union who played there in 1987. [5] [4] The Giants would remain at The Glass House until their final season in 1998. The Tigers would move to the 15,400 capacity (for basketball) National Tennis Centre at Flinders Park in 1992, while the Spectres and Saints merged in 1991 to become the South East Melbourne Magic. The Magic would also move to Melbourne Park in 1992 leaving the Giants as the only NBL tenants at the venue.

From 1984 until 1986, The Glass house with its 7,200 capacity was the largest venue used in the NBL. Its position was taken when the Brisbane Bullets moved into the 13,500 seat Brisbane Entertainment Centre in mid-1986. By the time of the venue's last NBL game on Friday 5 June 1998 which saw the Giants defeat the Perth Wildcats 109–103, The Glass House was still the 4th largest venue in use, though having opened in 1956 it was also the oldest.

The North Melbourne Giants won the NBL Championship at The Glass House in 1989 when they defeated the Canberra Cannons 2–0 in the Grand Final series, reversing the result of the 1988 NBL Grand Final when they had lost to the Cannons. [6] [7] They won their second and last title in 1994 when they defeated the Adelaide 36ers, again 2–0 in the best of three series. [8]

The Glass House also hosted the NBL All-Star Game in 1988, 1989 and 1991.

Collingwood Football Club

Collingwood Football Club moved its administrative and training facilities from Victoria Park to the Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Centre in 2004. [9] The Collingwood Football Club also used Olympic Park Stadium being adjacent to the centre as its outdoor training facility from 2004 until 2012, when it was demolished. [10] After this occurred, Collingwood Football Club moved its outdoor training ground to the newly developed Olympic Park Oval that replaced the space of the stadium after demolition.

Sponsorship and naming rights arrangements

The luxury vehicle manufacturer Lexus bought the naming rights to the venue in 2004; as the Lexus Centre, it no longer served as a public stadium, instead being used by the Victorian Institute of Sport and the Collingwood Football Club as a sports administration and training facility. [4] The Lexus Centre was listed as part of the Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Precinct. On 21 November 2009, Collingwood Football Club announced publicly on the official AFL website that Lexus would no longer continue to maintain the rights of naming the centre. Lexus announced in a statement that "the branding exercise had achieved its marketing objectives and was no longer a priority in its marketing strategy", hence ending a six-year naming rights deal between Lexus and Collingwood. [11] In March, 2010, Collingwood announced that Westpac bank was the new naming rights sponsor of the centre. [12]

On 19 August 2015, Holden signed a multimillion-dollar three-year deal to become a Premier Partner of Collingwood and holder of the naming rights to the club's headquarters at Olympic Park, now known as the Holden Centre. [13]

In March 2022, American International Assurance Company (Australia) (known as AIA) was announced as the new naming rights partner. The centre was thus renamed the AIA Centre. [14]

Awards and recognition

The Swimming and Diving Stadium received an Engineering Heritage International Marker from Engineers Australia as part of its Engineering Heritage Recognition Program. [15] In 2021 the Australian Institute of Architects gave the design its National Enduring Architecture Award. [16]

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{{Infobox_Stadium | stadium_name = Bendigo Stadium | nickname = | image = | location = Marong Road, Bendigo, Victoria | coordinates = 36°45′30″S144°14′57″E | broke_ground = | opened = | closed = | demolished = | owner = | operator = | surface = | construction_cost = | architect = | former_names = | tenants = Bendigo Braves (NBL1)
Bendigo Spirit (WNBL)
Australian Goldfields Open
Collingwood Magpies (NNL) (2019)
Melbourne United (ANBL) (2021)
New Zealand Breakers (ANBL) (2021-2022)
Bendigo Volleyball Association | seating_capacity = 4,000 |}}

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References

  1. "Contact". Collingwood Football Club . 23 September 2022. Archived from the original on 23 September 2022. Retrieved 23 September 2022.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "Victorian Heritage Database - OLYMPIC SWIMMING STADIUM". Heritage Council of Victoria. Retrieved 27 September 2007.
  3. Doyle, Edward A, ed. (1958). The Official Report of the Organizing Committee for the Games of the XVI Olympiad, Melbourne 1956 (PDF) (Report). Organizing Committee of the XVI Olympiad. pp. 41–42. ASIN   B00CHQ4LLO . Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  4. 1 2 3 4 "Magpies seek new naming rights partner for HQ". Australian Football League . Archived from the original on 1 October 2012. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  5. 1987 Australian Boomers vs USSR basketball
  6. 1988 NBL Grand Final
  7. 1989 NBL Grand Final
  8. 1994 NBL Finals
  9. "Victory Park". 10 February 2012. Retrieved 11 November 2021.
  10. "Olympic Park Stadium" . Retrieved 19 February 2022.
  11. "Magpies seek new naming rights partner for HQ". Australian Football League . Archived from the original on 1 October 2012. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  12. Josey, Leigh (23 March 2010). "Collingwood announce new "Westpac Centre" sponsorship, Westpac announce interest rate rise. Coincidence?". Crikey . Private Media Partners. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  13. Rielly, Stephen (19 August 2015). "Introducing the Holden Centre". collingwoodfc.com.au . BigPond.
  14. "Collingwood Football Club's headquarters renamed the AIA Centre". Austadiums. 9 March 2022.
  15. "1956 Olympic Swimming and Diving Stadium, Melbourne 1956 -". Engineers Australia. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  16. "2021 National Enduring Architecture Award". ArchitectureAU. Architecture Media Pty Ltd. 4 November 2021. Retrieved 27 November 2021.

Commons-logo.svg Media related to Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Centre at Wikimedia Commons

Coordinates: 37°49′27″S144°58′47″E / 37.82417°S 144.97972°E / -37.82417; 144.97972