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Having evaluated various sites north of Brisbane along with greenfield sites near Brisbane Airport and sites in the southern corridor such as Springwood in 2018, the Brisbane Lions settled on vacant land in Springfield. $70 million was the initial estimate for the cost of construction, with the final cost being $82.1 million.
Giffin Park is a sports venue in Coorparoo, a suburb in Brisbane, Australia. It includes an Australian rules football ground. [2] It was formerly used by the Brisbane Lions as their secondary training venue and is used during the summer due to clashes with the Australian Cricket season. [3] The Lions NEAFL team formerly used it as a home ground.
Springfield Central Stadium serves as both the training base of the Brisbane Lions and the home ground of Brisbane's AFLW team. Between 1997 and 2022, the club trained out of the Gabba during the football season. The club's administrative and indoor training facilities were also located in the stadium.
Chart of yearly table positions for Brisbane Lions in NSL Queensland Lions crest. The club was founded in 1957 as Hollandia-Inala Soccer Club by Dutch immigrants. From the start they were based at grounds in the Brisbane suburb of Darra and then moved to Pine Road, Richlands, where they play today.
It was the primary home ground for the Brisbane Lions in the AFL Women's competition during the 2017 and 2018 seasons. On 18 February 2017, it hosted its first AFL Women's game, between Brisbane and Collingwood. [1] No games were fixtured at the venue for the 2019 season, with most being moved to Moreton Bay Central Sports Complex. [2]
Lions Stadium (also known as Luxury Paints Stadium for sponsorship reasons) [1] is a soccer stadium located in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. It has lights for night matches and can seat up to 5000 people. [2] It serves as the primary ground for the Queensland Lions in the National Premier League. [3]
Brisbane Queensland Convertible 50,000 By 2032 Olympics: 2032 Olympics: Brisbane Live: Brisbane Queensland Convertible 15,000 By 2032 Olympics: 2032 Olympics: Brisbane Indoor Sports Centre: Brisbane Queensland Convertible 12,000 By 2032 Olympics: 2032 Olympics: Macquarie Point Stadium: Hobart Tasmania Convertible 23,000 2029 Tasmania Football Club
Home of the Queensland Bulls (Cricket) and the Brisbane Lions (Australian rules football), the Gabba hosted Olympic football matches for the Sydney 2000 Olympics and was the site of the famous tied test of 1960 between the West Indies and Australia. Teams based there include: Queensland Bulls and Brisbane Lions (Australian rules football).