Chirnside Park (stadium)

Chirnside Park
Avalon Airport Oval
Chirnside Park in 2014, showing the pavilion on the northern wing
Location Werribee, Victoria
Coordinates 37°54′17″S 144°39′11″E / 37.90472°S 144.65306°E / -37.90472; 144.65306Coordinates: 37°54′17″S 144°39′11″E / 37.90472°S 144.65306°E / -37.90472; 144.65306
Owner City of Wyndham
Capacity 10,000[1]
Field size 175m × 125m
Surface Grass
Tenants
Werribee Football Club

Chirnside Park, also known as Avalon Airport Oval due to naming rights sponsorship, is an Australian rules football ground in Werribee, Victoria, Australia, located between Watton Street and the Werribee River.

Chirnside Park is the home ground of Victorian Football League team Werribee Tigers who have played at the ground since their inception in 1965. For the 2011 VFL season, Williamstown Football Club played the majority of its home games at Chirnside Park while their home ground Burbank Oval is being redeveloped. Western Region Football League first division finals have been played at the venue since 2011.[2]

Chirnside Park has a main social club building on the wing with terracing for spectators. A small wooden grandstand, believed to date to the 1910s or 1920s,[3] is situated in the forward pocket next to it. Floodlights were recently installed at the ground, and night matches have been played there since 2011.

The total capacity is around the 10,000-mark. In 1982, an estimated 10,000 spectators saw Werribee's first ever match against VFA powerhouse Port Melbourne, which Werribee won by one point.[4]

The wider Chirnside Park area, outside the fenced football ground, also contains tennis courts, a public swimming pool, and the Werribee Bowling Club.[3]

References

  1. "Chirnside Park". austadiums.com. Austadiums. Retrieved 25 September 2015.
  2. Michael Esposito (6 September 2011). "Finals move". Star (Werribee, VIC).
  3. 1 2 Dr Carlotta Kellaway (1997). "Chirnside Park, Watton Street, Werribee". Retrieved 9 March 2014.
  4. Marc Fiddian (10 May 1982). "Werribee topples Port by a point". The Age (Melbourne, VIC). p. 25.

External links


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