Docklands Stadium, also currently known by naming rights sponsorship as Marvel Stadium, is a multi-purpose sports and entertainment stadium in the Docklands area of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Construction started in October 1997 and was completed in 2000 at a cost of A$460 million. The stadium features a retractable roof and the ground level seating can be converted from oval to rectangular configuration.[4]
Marvel Stadium | |
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Former names |
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Location | Harbour Esplanade, Docklands, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia |
Coordinates | 37°48′59″S 144°56′51″E |
Owner | Australian Football League |
Operator | Australian Football League (2020–present) Melbourne Stadiums Limited (2000–2020) |
Capacity | 56,347 (venue capacity) 53,343 (seating capacity) 47,000 (cricket[1][2] and rectangular mode)[3] |
Surface | Grass |
Construction | |
Broke ground | October 1997 |
Opened | 9 March 2000 |
Construction cost | A$460 million |
Architect | Populous in association with Daryl Jackson |
General contractor | Baulderstone Hornibrook |
Tenants | |
Essendon Football Club (2000–present)
Melbourne Renegades (BBL; 2011–present)
Melbourne Victory FC (A-League; 2006–2021) | |
Website | |
marvelstadium | |
Ground information | |
End names | |
Lockett End Coventry End | |
International information | |
First ODI | 16 August 2000:![]() ![]() |
Last ODI | 3 February 2006:![]() ![]() |
As of 22 August 2015 Source: ESPNcricinfo | |
The stadium is primarily used for Australian rules football and was originally built as a replacement for Waverley Park.[5] Offices at the precinct serve as the headquarters of the Australian Football League (AFL) which, since 7 October 2016, has had exclusive ownership of the venue.[6] With a capacity for 53,000 spectators for sports, the stadium is the second-largest in Melbourne and has hosted a number of other sporting events including domestic Twenty20 cricket matches, Melbourne Victory soccer home matches, rugby league and rugby union matches as well as special events and concerts. The precinct is also headquarters for the Seven Network's digital broadcast centre and National Australia Bank.
The stadium was announced on 31 October 1996 as a more centrally located replacement for the much larger but ageing Waverley Park as a headquarters for the Australian Football League.[7] It was built in the Melbourne Docklands to the immediate west of the CBD, a central but largely deserted industrial area which had just commenced its own urban renewal project. Construction of the stadium by Baulderstone Hornibrook commenced in October 1997 under the working name "Victoria Stadium",[8] and was completed ahead of the 2000 AFL season. The stadium was originally developed by the Docklands Stadium Consortium and thereafter controlled by the Seven Network, the remaining leasehold interest in the stadium was sold to James Fielding Funds Management on 21 June 2006 for A$330 million.[9]
The stadium, like Waverley Park, was built primarily for Australian rules football, unlike most grounds of a similar size in Australia which were originally designed for cricket then later developed for football. It was the first Australian rules football stadium built with a retractable roof, which throughout its history has usually been closed for night matches and for wet weather day matches, and sometimes also for dry weather day matches. It was also the first stadium in Australia to have movable seating, as all four level-one tiers of the stadium can be moved up to 18 metres forward into a rectangular configuration; despite this being a key feature of the stadium design, it has rarely been used, due to damage to turf, time to deploy the seats, and a reduced capacity since the corner bays of the stadium become unavailable in rectangular configuration.
Construction was finished only weeks before the first match, and some scheduled pre-season matches were relocated as a result.[10] The first match to be played at the ground was between Essendon and Port Adelaide, before a crowd of 43,012, on 9 March 2000. Essendon won the match by 94 points, and Michael Long kicked the first goal at the ground.[11][12] The game was to have been played under the closed roof, but due to technical issues it remained open. Six days later, Barbra Streisand staged venue's first concert.[13] The stadium's third football game, between Western Bulldogs and Brisbane Lions on 19 March, was the first to be played under the roof.[10] On 16 August 2000, the world's first indoor One Day International was held at the venue between Australia and South Africa. The first game played in the rectangular configuration was a Melbourne Storm game in July 2001. The first Soccer match played was in Round 5 2001 of the National Soccer League between South Melbourne FC and Melbourne Knights FC.[14]
From the beginning, the stadium's playing surface was criticised for its slipperiness, hardness and lack of grass coverage, and the increased risk of injury that this causes to players.[15] Maintaining surface quality remains one of the stadium's biggest challenges.[16] The stadium's orientation and highly built up grandstands mean that the Northern end of the stadium in particular receives only receives 6 weeks of sunlight a year; concerts held at the stadium are also usually placed at the Southern end due to the ability for grass to recover more quickly.[17] The entire surface undergoes regular, expensive replacement during the season with turf grown externally, under contract by HG Turf, whereas the responsibility of laying and managing the turf lies with Docklands Stadium management.[18] Since 2007, elaborate heating and lighting to better allow grass to be grown and managed within the stadium have been in use.[17]
The venue was damaged by a thunderstorm on the afternoon of 6 March 2010 during the 2010 Victorian storms. The external roof at Gate 2 caved in, causing damage and flooding inside the entertainment area. That evening's preseason match between St Kilda and Fremantle was delayed due to WorkSafe inspections, but still went ahead before a small crowd of 5000.[19]
In 2015, LED electronic advertising was added around the perimeter of the ground on level 1 and 2, as well as a strip synthetic turf around the edge of the fence, outside the boundary line. The synthetic strip was narrowed after Brisbane Lions player Michael Close suffered a season ending ACL injury on the uneven surface during a game in 2015.[20][21]
The stadium became unpopular with many of its tenant clubs, especially St Kilda, North Melbourne and Western Bulldogs, as high operating costs and the high proportion of gate revenues which were paid back to the stadium meant that clubs earned much lower returns for a game at Docklands than they would have earned from the same attendance at the Melbourne Cricket Ground; and usually had to draw at least 20,000 spectators to break even on a game.[22] Those three clubs all received compensation payments from the AFL to balance the weak deals,[23] and sold occasional home matches to small interstate or international venues for greater financial returns than they could earn at Docklands.[24]
The stadium and broader precinct will undergo a $225 million redevelopment, funded by the AFL and Victorian Government, to be constructed between 2021 and 2024.[25][26][27] This included two new video screens, which hang underneath the stadium's roof and were installed behind the goal at each end of the stadium ahead of the 2022 AFL season.[26] The rest of the redevelopment will upgrade stadium infrastructure, connect the precinct to the Melbourne CBD and open up access to the Docklands waterfront.[27][28]
Under the terms of the agreement governing construction and operation of the venue, in 2025 the AFL was to win ownership of the stadium for a nominal $30 fee;[29] but the AFL Commission opted to purchase exclusive ownership of the stadium earlier than this, in October 2016, for approximately $200 million.[6] This purchase left the stadium's tenant AFL clubs millions of dollars better off, as they and the AFL arranged more favourable tenancy agreements.[24] The stadium was eventually integrated into the AFL structure several years later, ending the independent management of the venue by Melbourne Stadiums Limited.[28]
The purchase also soon proved critically important to the AFL's finances during the COVID-19 pandemic, when it was able to leverage its ownership of the stadium in obtaining a $500–600 million line of credit to cover cash flow shortages when the 2020 AFL season was suspended.[30]
The stadium has never operated under the name 'Docklands Stadium', having been covered by naming rights deals throughout its entire operating history. When it opened, the Colonial State Bank paid $32.5 million for 10 years of naming rights, and the stadium opened as Colonial Stadium;[31] the same year, Commonwealth Bank took over the Colonial State Bank and began to discontinue the brand; Commonwealth then sold the balance of the naming rights contract to Telstra for about $50 million, and the stadium's name was changed to Telstra Dome on 1 October 2002. During this time it was colloquially referred to as "The Dome" – a colloquialism used actively by clubs which were sponsored by rival telecommunications companies (such as Essendon with 3 and Carlton with Optus).
On 1 March 2009, the naming rights transferred to Etihad Airways,[32] and the venue became known as Etihad Stadium under a five-year deal, which was later extended to ten years, at a cost estimated at between $5–$8 million per year.[33][34] This once again caused problems as the AFL would not initially recognise the new name due to its deal with rival airline Qantas;[35] the league recognised the new name only after further negotiation between the two parties.
In September 2018, the stadium was renamed Marvel Stadium after the stadium operators negotiated an eight-year deal with the Walt Disney Company (the parent company of Marvel Entertainment) to change the naming rights and install a Marvel retail store at the venue.[36]
The ends of the ground, where the AFL goal posts are located, are named after the two leading goalkickers in VFL/AFL history: the northern end is the Lockett End, after Tony Lockett; and the southern end is the Coventry End after Gordon Coventry. Some clubs informally use alternative names during their home games in place of those to honour their own histories.[38]
As of 2021, five AFL teams have deals in place to play home games at Docklands Stadium:[39]
All Victorian-based AFL teams, including those not listed here, have played some home games at the ground during its history, owing to a contractual requirement between the AFL and the stadium's original owners to stage at least 46 AFL matches per year until 2013, and 40 matches per year thereafter. Geelong and Collingwood both had deals to play around four home matches per year during the 2000s;[10] and most other clubs still play one or two home matches there per year to make up the numbers.
In 2020, to mark 20 years of AFL football at the ground, the AFL named the 20 biggest moments and stories involving games played at the stadium in a video.[41] The top 5 were as follows:
The venue's major summer tenant is Big Bash League side Melbourne Renegades, which has played its home games at the Docklands Stadium since the league's inception in 2011/12. A drop-in pitch is used to facilitate cricket at the venue. At the end of the 2016/17 Big Bash, the stadium was rated the most entertaining venue for T20 cricket in Australia.[42]
In 2016, Chris Gayle of the Renegades and the West Indies tied the record for the fastest T20 half century (12 balls) during the last round of BBL 5 at the ground against the Adelaide Strikers.[43]
The first time it was used for Soccer was in 2001 between South Melbourne and Melbourne Knights in the NSL. A-League team Melbourne Victory played home matches at the stadium between 2006/07 and 2020/21. Originally, the plan was that the stadium would only be used for games against its biggest rivals, Sydney FC, in the 2006/07 A-League; but after the success of that game, the club shifted permanently from Olympic Park Stadium to Docklands from the 2006/07 season until the 2009/10 season. This gave the stadium its first major summer tenant. After the opening of the Melbourne Rectangular Stadium in 2010, the club played only high-drawing games and finals at Docklands, with all other games being played at the new stadium; and as of the 2021-22 season, Victory ceased playing home matches at the stadium.[44]
In the 2001 National Rugby League season, the stadium was the permanent home ground for the Melbourne Storm, but this deal lasted only one year. The club occasionally hosted high-drawing home games and finals at Docklands after that. In 2023, the Storm will play two games at the ground, as their regular home ground AAMI Park will be unavailable in July-August due to the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup.[45]
Docklands has also hosted interstate and international rugby league games. As Telstra Dome, Docklands hosted its first State of Origin game in 2006 as it hosted the deciding third game. New South Wales arrived looking for a win that would secure their fourth consecutive Origin victory and led 14–4 with 10 minutes to go, but Queensland scored two converted tries in the space of five minutes – first Brent Tate's long-range try after a line break from Johnathan Thurston and then Darren Lockyer intercepting a Brett Hodgson pass inside New South Wales' own half – to win 16-14 for the first of an eventual 8 consecutive Queensland victories.
As Etihad Stadium, the stadium also hosted Origin games in 2009 and 2012. The 2012 match attracted 56,021, a new record for rugby league at the stadium.[46]
The stadium has been converted to host several other sporting events. In its early years, the stadium was used for off-season one day international cricket matches, but has also held some summer matches, particularly in 2006 when the Melbourne Cricket Ground was unavailable due to preparations for the 2006 Commonwealth Games. The venue has also hosted international rugby union – including being Melbourne's venue during the 2003 Rugby World Cup – although the Melbourne Rectangular Stadium now hosts most such games. The venue has hosted international basketball,[47] Rugby 7s at the 2006 Commonwealth Games,[37] a 2002 non-televised WWE[48][49] live event[50][51] as part of the WWE Global Warning Tour: Melbourne, the 2015 UFC 193[52] in front of a then-record UFC attendance of 56,214 fans,[53] a motorcycle speedway event (when it played host to the 2015 Speedway Grand Prix of Australia on a 346 metres (378 yards) long temporary track), and a controversial international darts event in 2015 in which spectators seated on the arena started throwing chairs and furniture.[54]
Sport | Date | Crowd | Event |
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UFC | 6 October 2019 | 57,127 | UFC 243 |
Rugby union | 29 June 2013 | 56,771 | 2013 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia: Australia vs British & Irish Lions |
Rugby union | 7 July 2001 | 56,605 | 2001 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia: Australia vs British & Irish Lions |
State of Origin | 23 May 2012 | 56,021 | 2012 State of Origin Game I: Queensland vs New South Wales |
A-League | 18 February 2007 | 55,436 | 2007 A-League Grand Final: Melbourne Victory vs Adelaide United |
AFL | 5 July 2009 | 54,444 | 2009 AFL Round 14: St Kilda vs Geelong |
International soccer | 6 February 2008 | 50,969 | 2010 World Cup Qualification Third Round: Australia vs Qatar |
International Rules | 28 October 2005 | 45,428 | 2005 International Rules Series 2nd Test: Australia vs Ireland |
Big Bash League | 12 January 2018 | 44,316 | 2017–18 Big Bash League Round 7: Melbourne Renegades vs Melbourne Stars |
Boxing | 5 June 2022 | 41,129 | George Kambosos Jr. vs. Devin Haney |
One Day International | 38,364 | Commonwealth Bank Series | |
NRL | 23 September 2007 | 33,427 | 2007 NRL Preliminary Final: Melbourne Storm vs Parramatta Eels |
Motorsport | 24 October 2015 | 26,609 | Speedway Grand Prix Round 12 2015: Speedway Grand Prix of Australia |
Last updated 16 August 2021.[55]
The following table summarises the ODI centuries scored at Docklands.
No. | Score | Player | Team | Balls | Inns. | Opposing team | Date | Result |
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1 | 106 | Michael Bevan | ![]() | 125 | 1 | ![]() | 16 August 2000 | Won |
2 | 114* | Steve Waugh | ![]() | 103 | 1 | ![]() | 16 August 2000 | Won |
3 | 103 | Adam Gilchrist | ![]() | 79 | 1 | ICC World XI | 7 October 2005 | Won |
Date | Performer(s) | Attendance | Notes |
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15 & 17 March 2000 | Barbra Streisand | 70,000 | Part of the Timeless Tour |
1 December 2002 | Red Hot Chili Peppers | 21,729 | Part of the By The Way Tour |
28 February 2003 | KISS | 33,000 | Recording of Kiss Symphony: Alive IV |
20 March 2003 | Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band | Part of The Rising Tour | |
10 December 2003 | Robbie Williams | 57,027 | Part of The 2003 Tour |
17 December 2005 | Green Day | 8,439 | Part of the American Idiot World Tour |
18–19 November 2006 | U2 | 127,275 | Part of the Vertigo Tour |
17–18 December 2006 | Robbie Williams | 125,274 | Part of the Close Encounters Tour |
13–15 November 2008 | André Rieu | 38,605 | Part of the stadium tour with the Johann Strauss Orchestra |
20 November 2009 | Pearl Jam | 45,000 | Part of the Backspacer Tour |
3 March 2010 | George Michael | 47,000 | Part of the George Michael Live in Australia tour |
11,13 & 15 February 2010 | AC/DC | 181,495 | Part of the Black Ice World Tour |
1 & 3 December 2010 | U2 | 105,312 | Part of the U2 360° Tour |
11 December 2010 | Bon Jovi | 54,414 | Part of The Circle Tour |
31 December 2010 | Armin van Buuren | 15,000 | Part of 'Armin Only Mirage' event |
1 December 2011 | Eminem | 61,405 | Part of The Recovery Tour |
13 November 2012 | Coldplay | 63,378 | Part of the Mylo Xyloto Tour |
5 January 2013 | Mariah Carey | 46,500 | Part of the one-off Australian tour |
5–6 March 2013 | KISS/Mötley Crüe | Part of the Monster Tour | |
7 & 8 December 2013 | Bon Jovi | 91,505 | Part of the Because We Can: The Tour |
14 December 2013 | Taylor Swift | 47,257 | Part of the Red Tour |
19 February 2014 | Eminem | 59,675 | Part of the Rapture Tour |
18 & 19 September 2014 | Justin Timberlake | 41,777 | Part of The 20/20 Experience World Tour |
14–15 February 2015 | One Direction | 59,253 | Part of On the Road Again Tour |
28 February 2015 | Foo Fighters | 56,981 | Part of the Sonic Highways World Tour |
6 & 8 December 2015 | AC/DC | 100,000 / 100,000 | Part of the Rock or Bust World Tour |
12-14 February 2016 | Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo | 152,673 | Five performances |
9 & 10 December 2016 | Coldplay | 109,492 | Part of the A Head Full of Dreams Tour |
10 March 2017 | Justin Bieber | 54,821 | Part of the Purpose World Tour |
18 & 19 March 2017 | Adele | 152,300 | Part of the Adele Live 2017 Tour |
30 January 2018 | Foo Fighters | Part of the Concrete and Gold Tour | |
9, 10, 11 & 12 March 2018 | Ed Sheeran | 256,622 | Part of the ÷ Tour |
26 October 2018 | Taylor Swift | 63,027 | Part of Taylor Swift's Reputation Stadium Tour |
10 November 2018 | Usher | 51,104 | Part of the RNB Fridays Live Tour |
9 November 2019 | Janet Jackson | 23,205 | Part of the RNB Fridays Live Tour |
15 November 2019 | U2 | 59,726 | Part of The Joshua Tree Tour 2019 |
Docklands Stadium is serviced primarily by trains at Southern Cross Station, which is located on the City Loop and is serviced by all major metropolitan and country train and coach lines. The stadium is located on a public pedestrian concourse adjoining the northern end of the station.
The stadium is also serviced by several tram routes:
The stadium also has a 500 vehicle carpark underneath the field which is accessible by the public for event days.
The venue appeared in the 2007 film Ghost Rider. Its name, wherever visible, was digitally changed to the SoBe Dome. It can also be seen in the video for Jessica Mauboy's single "Running Back", as well as some television shows, such as the Seven Network's City Homicide and Network Ten's Rush.
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