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Olympic Park, nestled between the Yarra River and Melbourne Park, has enjoyed a strong connection to the people of Melbourne since the city's foundation and has seen a cavalcade of champions, all manner of events and many rejuvenations over the years. 

Bound by nature
Prior to white settlement of Melbourne in 1834, the Yarra River Valley was inhabited by the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nation.  Owing to its naturally lightly wooded grasslands, the area has always been idyllic for recreational pursuits and has certainly served a remarkable range of purposes.

The riverside pastures of Richmond Paddock became the first location for Melbourne's Zoological Gardens, the first established in Australia and one of the world's oldest. In 1858 a meeting was convened in the office of the Director of the Botanic Gardens and government botanist, Dr. (later Baron) Ferdinand von Meuller to discuss the creation of a zoological garden by the Zoological Society.  At the same time a separate Acclimatization Society had been formed by Edward Wilson, the retired editor of the Argus. Its aim included "the introduction, acclimatisation and domestication of all innoxious animals, birds, fish, insects and vegetables" (rather than the display of exotic animals).

The Zoological Society and the Acclimatisation Society were amalgamated in 1861; Wilson as President and von Mueller as Vice-President.  In the same year the Society was given a land grant of 33 acres from the Government, commonly known as the Richmond Paddock and located opposite the Botanic Gardens. The Zoo's first collection was housed within the Botanic Gardens under the dedicated care of von Mueller, the small collection including monkeys, native birds and mammals.  Rumours about neglect began to circulate and it became apparent that the original site was too damp and swampy to accommodate the animals and flora. Von Mueller reluctantly requested that the Government move the Zoo and in 1862 they granted 5,5000 pounds and a 55 acre site in Royal Park.


The Zoological Gardens became known as the Friendly Society's Gardens, but not before references to 'Government Paddock' and 'Police Paddock' were in evidence during the 1860's.  At this point the land still encompassed the MCG and surrounding parkland now known as Yarra Park.  The Combined Friendly Society used the land for athletic carnivals and social events.  Eight Hour Day was of great significance for a number of years and the yearly festival was held the same weekend as the current day Moomba Festival. During the 1870's athletic events such as the world 300 yard championship were held and in 1873 a 'Festival of the Druids' took place.  At the far eastern end near Punt road, cows grazed on what was alternatively called 'The Cow Paddock' and then 'Arthur's Paddock' when L Arthur Pty Ltd (a transport company) filled it with horses.  This is now Gosch's Paddock. 

Despite council improvements in the 1880's, the Yarra constantly flooded until the Yarra Improvement Act of 1896 empowered the Board of Works to realign the river between the City and Richmond. The League of Victorian Wheelmen completed a banked cycling track in 1897, which included a grandstand, bar and a range of amenities.  The 32-35ft wide asphalt track was enclosed by a picket fence.   As well as other cycling and running tracks (often the victims of flooding and subsequent swamps) the area around Olympic Park was used for tennis and women's cricket in the 1890's and early 1900's.


Humble beginnings
The area now known as Olympic Park and then still part of Yarra Park was proclaimed Crown land by the State Government on 24 August 1909.  It was to be a "site for the recreation convenience and amusement of people and as a children's playground". The 'Amateur Sports Grounds' basically consisted of two ovals - one rough and ready, the other with a concrete cycle track around its perimeter. Unfortunately little was done to improve the area's facilities for the ensuing 15 years, though prior to WWI dirt banks were formed for a planned motordrome.  Athletics was a regular feature still, the St Stephens Harriers using both ovals regularly.

Thrills and spills
Melbourne Carnivals Pty Ltd (formed in 1923 by Jim DuFrocq and Jack Campbell) developed and leased the site until the conclusion of World War II.  With dynamic and colourful local 'entrepreneur' John Wren a driving force along with Campbell, the company opened the 'Melbourne Motordrome' on 13 December 1924 at a cost of 30,000 pounds.  A dispute over dirt (gleaned from the Myer store construction) and other issues resulted in the builder Henry Harris Eilenberg taking Melbourne Carnivals to court.  Interestingly, future Prime Minister Robert Menzies represented the lease holder who lost the case.  Eilenberg was awarded ownership of the Motordrome until the 10,000 pound claim was settled.

The VFL sought to utilise the ground for a new club or as an advanced forerunner to Waverley Park but the deal didn't quite eventuate.  Although the Motordrome hosted three VFA Grand Finals from 1925-27 (Brunswick v Port Melbourne 1925 below), it was never used as a regular football ground.

 

A campaign led by defunct newspaper, The Argus, condemned the appropriation of public space for commercial activities however authorities maintained
the land was still open to the community. Criticism subsided as people attended all manner of entertainments. Crowds of 30,000 regularly thrilled to eclectic programs that featured motorbikes, sidecars and cycling - even wrestling.  Some events were less successful than others; racing ostriches were imported from South Australia in December 1926 but in what The Argus labelled 'a complete fiasco' the confused and terrified beasts (with cardboard cutout 'jockeys') wandered aimlessly, scampered in all directions or simply stood stupefied. 'Motor Push Ball' was another bizarre affair, as were children being pulled by billy goats in two wheeler carts.

The Motordrome's innovative 'saucer' track was primarily used by intrepid motorbike and sidecar racers.  'Danger don't lean over track' signs warned patrons (two were killed in 1929) and a red danger line half way up the wall guided riders around the daunting 48 degree bank. There were in fact two tracks; a flatter 494 yard dirt track surrounded by the treacherous 629 yard concrete drome used for two lap 'professional wheel racing' events. American star motorcyclists Jim Davis and Paul Anderson regularly thrilled crowds whilst Ron Hipwell was the local favourite. Tearing around at over 80 miles an hour with no brakes on the steep banks, it was little surprise that five riders lose their lives, the track earning the nickname the 'Murderdome'.  When oil spilt on the painted red line or riders moved too high on the track, trouble ensued.  In one spectacular crash Hipwell suffered concussion and assorted injuries (including his hip!) and never regained the form that saw him defeat Davis once in front of 30,000.
 
The first dirt track motorcycling race was held in 1928 and cycling also became popular as the Great Depression took hold. Huxley and Van Praag were stars of these meetings. Legendary rider Sir Hubert Opperman broke the world record for the dangerous 5 mile motor paced event. The nature of this unique 'velodrome' lent itself to motor-paced feats such as Opperman covering 100 miles in 90 minutes in 1930 and in a world famous performance, 1000 miles in 28hrs 55 mins.  The Motordrome also hosted the historically significant Austral Wheelrace five times between 1925 and 1929.

In 1928 Wren also established the world's richest professional footrace, 'The Melbourne Thousand'. The inaugural winner of the 500 pound prize was future South Melbourne star footballer Austin Robertson (the remaining 500 pounds distributed among placegetters). The sprint was last run in 1932 - the same year in which Melbourne played three VFL home games at the Motordrome owing to the MCG undergoing resurfacing works.

The Motordrome ran its last race on 8 April 1933, making way for 'more modern' dirt racing such as the popular midget cars promoted by Melbourne Carnivals' Richard Lean from 1934.  The new Olympic Park Speedway saw the birth of this still popular form of racing in Australia.  Its name was also the first reference to the term 'Olympic Park' to what was still a rough sports ground on the western side and a better quality field surrounded by the track on the eastern side.  

Football returned on 30 March 1935 when the first floodlit game between 1934 Grand Finalists Richmond and South Melbourne remarkably drew 25,000 spectators (causing Jack Dyer to walk to the ground, unable to get on the packed trams). The practice match was interspersed with midget car races in the breaks.   Amid some controversy, Wren nearly closed a deal for Richmond to relocate to Olympic Park around this time.

The Australian Imperial Force assumed control of Olympic Park in 1940 although one last speedway meeting was held on 1 April 1946 in aid of St Vincent's Hospital with the permission of the Fuel Board.  Continued petrol rationing spelled the death knell for the speedway in the aftermath of WW2. The venue met with the wrecking ball in 1946 but few local residents lamented the demise of the noisy motorsports.  Further deconstruction occurred inadvertently when a fire destroyed a large wooden grandstand in 1951.

      
Ad for the 'Drome' featuring Opperman (1926), footy & midget cars (1935) and Olympic Park Speedway program (1940).

1956 - Olympic Park lives up to its name
The welcome Olympic Games transformation began in 1951 and saw the building of a velodrome and a new 5,500 seat world standard swimming pool.  Olympic Park venues hosted Olympic hockey, cycling, soccer, water polo, diving and swimming competitions.  All up, the Aussies won 8 gold, 4 silver and 2 bronze in the pool, our cyclists a gold and a bronze.  

The most famous sporting moment at Olympic Park actually occured just prior to the Games in the 1956 Australian Mile Championship.  Champion Australian runner John Landy stopped mid-race to help fallen rival Ron Clarke to his feet, then sprinted away to claim the title. A statue across the road is a permanent reminder of what in a recent poll was ranked the third most memorable Australian sporting incident ever.  Reverand Alan Moyes, a witness, described it as 'the most incredibly stupid, beautiful, foolish, gentlemanly act’ he had ever seen.

 
Olympic Park aerial shot, 1956                                The famous fall; Landy (#112) and Clarke

Entertaining the masses
The Victorian Amateur Football Association took up residence at Olympic Park in 1957, using the venue as its administration base and for a weekly featured match.  Victoria comfortably defeated South Australia in an amateur state game played the same year, televised by the ABC (the first full coverage of an Australian Rules game).  By 1961 the ABC was also televising the VAFA's 'match of the day' but commercial realities saw the Olympic Park Management Committee reluctantly bid farewell to its valued tenant at the end of the year as greyhound racing begun a 34 year tenure.   

During the 1960's Olympic Park attracted up to 900,000 people annually for athletics and soccer.  In 1966 an incredible 37,500 soccer fans turned out to watch Roma FC (4) defeat Victoria (2) - doubling the stadium's current capacity.  The Victorian Rugby Union competition used the Eastern sportsground, as did three Victorian Soccer Federation teams and even the Australian Equestrian Federation held twice yearly championships here.  As the only FIFA recognised soccer stadium in Australia, Olympic Park hosted a number of international football matches. In total, Australia has played 34 internationals (including six World Cup Qualifiers) at Olympic Park for 11 wins, 11 draws and 12 losses.  Teams such as Chelsea, Everton and other top European teams have also played the Aussies.

A 50,000 pound investment by the Melbourne Greyhound Racing Association saw their relocation from Arden St. North Melbourne to a redeveloped No. 2 oval in 1962.   The first meeting on 20 August saw 6000 punters brave the cold.  In 1972 the velodrome was demolished and the following year a new grandstand was built for greyhounds, rugby and soccer.  The  dishlicker's halcyon days would come in the 'Seventies and 'Eighties when regular crowds of 5000 were also entertained by athletic races during the night, as well as promotions tied to Moomba, glamorous models and various celebrities.  

More changes as big time sport calls Olympic Park home
A 2.43ha stretch of land between Batman Avenue and Swan Street (alongside Gosch's Paddock) was purchased from the Commonwealth by the Victorian Government in 1988 for $15m.  Here the Swan Street Army Depot was built in 1935 at a cost of 36,000 pounds.  Now occupied by the new rectangular stadium, a ‘Swan Song’ ceremonial march out was conducted in 1991 to mark the facility's closure.  The Depot was variously used by Royal Australian Engineer's (RAE) militia troops (1935-39), RAE headquarters and important tactical base during WW2, a meal and rest area for Olympic athletes and officials, an assembly point for Vietnam National Servicemen and a security HQ for events such as CHOGM (1981) and Pope John Paul II's 1986 visit. 

Billowing smok
e permeated through a grandstand causing the evacuation of 2000 greyhound enthusiasts in November 1991, moments after the last race.  Forty firemen were dispatched to the fire that began in a storeroom.   The last greyhound race was run in February 1996 with 3000 punters sadly bidding farewell.  CityLink's Burnley Tunnel claimed the back straight, forcing the club to relocate to Broadmeadows.

The distinctive Olympic Pool facility was again refurbished in 2002, becoming a high performance training centre for the Victorian Institute of Sport.  The 'Lexus Centre' also became home to the Collingwood Football Club in 2004 after 112 years residence at Victoria Park.  

The Western sportsground, known today as Olympic Park Stadium, is the home ground of 2007 NRL champion Melbourne Storm and training field for A-League champion of 2006/07, Melbourne Victory.  The Socceroos also train here on occasion although the stadium is most utilised for school and club athletics.  More than fifty years after construction, Olympic Park is still the only dedicated athletics venue in Australia capable of accommodating large crowds, thus attracting international stars at grand prix events.  Athletics Victoria reside within the Members' Grandstand and an adjacent building is home to Tennis Victoria and the Olympic Park Sports Medicine Centre.

The old Eastern Sportsground was reborn as Edwin Flack Field for a short period whereupon Collingwood used it as their training ground from 2004-06 - some irony given their once great patron John Wren had built the Motordrome on the same location.  In 2008 Melbourne & Olympic Parks' jurisdiction was extended to include Gosch's Paddock - public parkland that also serves as Collingwood and Victory's training fields.

The new state of the art Melbourne Rectangular Stadium, a 31,000 seat home for rugby and soccer, is now being built between Goschs' Paddock and Olympic Park Stadium.  The revolutionary stadium is on track to open in early 2010.

Olympic Park is surrounded by some of Melbourne's most famous landmarks - the MCG, the Arts Centre, Government House, the Botanical Gardens and Rod Laver Arena.  It is easy to forget the cultural and sporting significance of Olympic Park and its own enormous contribution to Melbourne's history.

By Jeff Dowsing

The author wishes to thank Garry Baker (for his assistance with the early history of Olympic Park, particularly related to the Motordrome and Speedway era) and Roy Hay (soccer).