Name
Accor Stadium
Alternate: Stadium Australia

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Established
1999 (25 years old)

Capacity
81,000

Build Cost
A$690 million

Architect


Country
Australia

Location
Sydney, NSW

Timezone


Coordinates
-33.847222, 151.063056



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Past Events
06 Oct Melbourne St home team badge 6 - 14home team badge Penrith Pant
28 Sep Penrith Pant home team badge 26 - 6home team badge Cronulla Sha
21 Sep Australia Ru home team badge 28 - 31home team badge New Zealand
15 Sep Canterbury B home team badge 22 - 24home team badge Manly Sea Ea
07 Sep Canterbury B home team badge 6 - 44home team badge North Queens
06 Sep South Sydney home team badge 28 - 36home team badge Sydney Roost
30 Aug Canterbury B home team badge 22 - 34home team badge Manly Sea Ea


Description
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Stadium Australia, commercially known as Accor Stadium, is a multi-purpose stadium located in Sydney Olympic Park, a suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. The stadium, which is sometimes referred to as Sydney Olympic Stadium, Homebush Stadium or simply the Olympic Stadium, was completed in March 1999 at a cost of A$690 million to host the 2000 Summer Olympics. The Stadium was leased by a private company, the Stadium Australia Group, until the Stadium was sold back to the NSW Government on 1 June 2016 after NSW Premier Michael Baird announced the Stadium was to be redeveloped as a world-class rectangular stadium. The Stadium is owned by Venues NSW on behalf of the NSW Government.

The stadium was originally built to hold circa 115,000 spectators, making it the largest Olympic Stadium ever built and the second largest stadium in Australia after the Melbourne Cricket Ground which held more than 120,000 before its re-design in the early 2000s. In 2003, reconfiguration work was completed to shorten the north and south wings, and install movable seating. These changes reduced the capacity to 80,000, with the capacity to add seating depending on the venue configuration. Awnings were also added over the north and south stands, allowing most of the seating to be under cover. The stadium was engineered along sustainable lines, e.g., utilising less steel in the roof structure than the Olympic stadiums of Athens and Beijing.
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