Gabba’s Olympic swansong before demolition
Brisbane’s historic Gabba cricket ground is poised to host an Olympic gold medal event before the stands are demolished after the Games. Here’s what’s ahead for the 130-year-old venue.
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Brisbane’s historic Gabba cricket ground is poised to host the Olympic gold medal cricket match before the stands are demolished to make way for housing after the Games.
Billed to be the main Olympic athletics stadium during Brisbane’s original Olympic bid, the Gabba will instead likely host cricket as its final major event.
Premier David Crisafulli said the Gabba was his preferred option, but insisted experts told him it could not be upgraded in time.
“I did believe we had time, I did – and some of the best people in infrastructure delivery said we don’t,” he said.
“I can’t run the risk of a venue not being ready on the world stage.
“That would be something we couldn’t recover from.”
Brisbane Lions and Queensland Cricket will continue playing at the 130-year-old venue until 2032 before they move to the new Victoria Park stadium.
The 100-day infrastructure review repeated the litany of problems faced by the Gabba including a weakening roof structure and noncompliance with disability and fire standards.
It found the significant work required to fix the issues meant upgrading and rebuilding the Gabba was “not a credible option”.
Mr Crisafulli said it would have its final event in 2032 before being replaced with housing alongside the new Brisbane Arena at the adjacent Go Print site.
“The vision our government has beyond the games also includes the Gabba coming down to make way for urban renewal beside a world-class arena,” he said.
“Wouldn’t it be amazing to see the Australian Cricket team win the gold medal in an Olympic final – the Gabba’s swan song.”
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Originally published as Gabba’s Olympic swansong before demolition