Queenstown Oval | |
---|---|
Location | Queenstown, Tasmania |
Opened | 1880 |
Surface | Gravel |
Construction cost | Unknown |
Architect | Various |
Capacity | 5,000 |
Tenants | |
Queenstown Crows Football Club |
Queenstown Oval, built in 1880, is an infamous gravel playing surface in Queenstown located on the west coast of Tasmania. The ground has a main concrete grandstand and a total capacity of 5,000.
Queenstown Oval was the grand final venue for the now extinct Western Tasmanian Football Association [1] for nearly a century and is currently the home ground for the local Queenstown Crows in the Darwin Football Association.
The ground was the first ground in Tasmanian that had a siren installed to signal the start and end of each quarter, with the siren being borrowed from the Mt Lyell Mines.[2][3]
The Queenstown Oval was inducted into the Tasmanian Football Hall of Fame in 2007.
There is a subtle reference to the ground's gravel playing surface in Jamie Cooper's Tasmania's Team of the Century painting, with gravel visible in the knees of Queenstown-born Australian football legend Ian Stewart.[4]