Yarrow Stadium
New Zealand rugby stadium From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
New Zealand rugby stadium From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Yarrow Stadium is situated in the central suburb of Westown in New Plymouth, Taranaki, New Zealand, with main vehicle access off Maratahu Street. Named the third best rugby stadium on earth by New Zealand Rugby World magazine in May 2009, Yarrow Stadium (known as Stadium Taranaki for the Rugby World Cup 2011) conforms with the International Rugby Board's "clean stadium" policy.[2]
'The Bull Ring' 'The Fish Bowl' | |
Full name | Yarrow Stadium |
---|---|
Former names | Rugby Park, Stadium Taranaki |
Location | New Plymouth, New Zealand |
Coordinates | 39°4′13″S 174°3′54″E |
Capacity | 30,000 (30,345 with standing room)[1] |
Surface | Grass with sand base |
Scoreboard | Located at the southern end of the ground |
Construction | |
Broke ground | January 1931 |
Built | June 10th 1947 (Renovated July 18th 2002) |
Opened | August 1972 |
Construction cost | NZ$15 million |
Architect | Warren and Mahoney |
Tenants | |
Chiefs (Super Rugby) Hurricanes (Super Rugby) (1996-2013) Taranaki Rugby Football Union (ITM Cup) Team Taranaki (Central Premier League) Taranaki Sharks (NZRL) Central Districts Stags (NZC) |
The primary tenant of this 25,000-capacity stadium is the Taranaki Rugby Football Union which has a representative team playing in the country's principal rugby union competition, the Mitre 10 Cup. Since 2013, the stadium has played host to the Chiefs team as part of a new alliance, after Taranaki cut their ties with the Wellington-based Hurricanes.
The venue was first developed as a rugby ground in 1931, with the first stadium completed in 1947. Further stands were built at the same end and older ones demolished. Four floodlight towers were built in 1998 to hold night events. A major redevelopment saw two new grandstands added and considerable modernisation in 2002, and further enhancements to the venue were completed in 2010, raising the capacity to more than 25,500 for the 2011 Rugby World Cup and other fixtures.
The stadium is a personal legacy of the late Noel Yarrow, a pioneering Taranaki baker and businessman, and active philanthropist. Noel was a passionate rugby supporter, and the major grandstand overlooking the field's western sideline is a tribute to his support.
The east stand was deemed earthquake prone in November 2017 with the west stand being ruled out of action in June 2018. Rugby was played at the venue in 2018 and 2019 but spectators had to watch matches from the ends, while a grandstand was erected in front of the east stand. Temporary infrastructure was bought into cater for the changes as changing facilities and corporate areas were off limits.
In May 2019 owners, the Taranaki Regional Council, made a decision to repair and refurbish both grandstands in order for both stands to comply with earthquake regulations. The Taranaki Rugby Football Union and a catering company moved to alternative locations.[3]
It was announced in November 2020, that the East Stand will be demolished and will be replaced by a similar sized stand but with extra facilities at the back to house events without opening the entire stand. The contract to repair the West Stand was awarded to Clelands Construction in December 2020 and involves major earthquake strengthening works including improvements to ground stability, foundation tiebacks and new steel beams.[4] The roof of the West Stand will remain intact while the bleachers and seating are removed to gain access to the ground below. The west stand is now open and the east stand will be completed in 2024.
The Legends Lounge is on the top floor of the TSB Bank Stand and has panoramic views of both playing arenas and the back fields. It is used for business conferences, dinners, sales presentations and meetings, and has a capacity of 300 seated and 650 standing.
Features
Additional corporate boxes are being built at the top of the western stand on either side of the media area.
In the past Yarrow Stadium has hosted Relay for Life, Multi-ethnic Extravaganza and Searchlight Tattoo.[5] Yarrow's has also hosted a number of cricket matches including the Central Districts when they clashed with Sri Lanka. Cricket is usually played at Pukekura Park, because of the incorrect size of Yarrow Stadium's number 1 field. However Yarrow Stadium hosted many matches in the New Zealand domestic Twenty20 cricket competition in the 2015/16 summer the first time in 14 years using a drop in pitch.
In February 2007 about 8000 people attended the Crusty Demons Kiwi Carnage Tour show at Yarrow Stadium to watch the 12-strong team of Kiwi, Australian, and American motorcycle riders perform back-flips and stunts known as the "rock solid" and the "ruler".[6]
In March 2009 the Crusty Demons Unleashed Hell Tour stopped in at Yarrow Stadium and put on a show for the approximately 6500 people who attended the event. Stunts performed by the six riders included the dangerous double back-flip.[7]
Postponed by 24 hours due to rain, the Nitro Circus team made up of around 30 motocross, BMX, FMX, inline skaters and scooter athletes performed at Yarrow Stadium on 12 February 2017. Using a range of different sized ramps, including the 15 metre high Gigantor Ramp, the riders launched themselves into the air on everything from motorbikes and scooters to a couch and a whisky barrel.
Members of the crowd were also called onto the field to take part in the show, with three volunteers jumping on a single motorbike with one of the Nitro riders to perform a back flip, while another went down the ramp on another guy's back.[8]
Stadium Taranaki, as Yarrow Stadium was temporarily renamed for the World Cup, hosted three matches during the pool play stage of the 2011 Rugby World Cup:
Date | Team No. 1 | Res. | Team No. 2 | Round | Attendance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2011-09-11 | Ireland | 22–10 | United States | Pool C | 20,823 |
2011-09-15 | Russia | 6–13 | United States | Pool C | 13,931 |
2011-09-26 | Wales | 81–7 | Namibia | Pool D | 13,710 |
While Pukekura Park is the traditional cricket venue in New Plymouth, Yarrow Stadium held matches over the years. It hosted two first-class one-day matches before its major development, completed in 2002 when Central Districts hosted Wellington in 1998 then Otago a year later. Central Districts returned in the summer of 2003 to play Wellington before a one-day match against Sri Lanka in 2004, despite the smaller boundaries. All four matches were under lights. In 2015, the stadium was used to host the final and semi-finals of the Georgie Pie Super Smash matches along with Pukekura Park. There were a handful of matches scheduled at the stadium for the 2016/17 season.[9][10][11][12][13]
For a single match, Yarrow Stadium acted as the home ground for the New Zealand Warriors as they played against the Canberra Raiders in the National Rugby League competition on 21 May 2016. Captained by Ryan Hoffman, the Warriors trailed the Raiders 20-0 at halftime eventually losing to the away team 38-12. More than 12,000 people turned up to watch the game and also hometown hero, Hāwera's own Issac Luke. The Warriors scored two tries to the Raider's six.[14][15]
Referred to as Stadium Taranaki for the 2015 FIFA U-20 World Cup, the venue played host to Group E and the Brazil v Uruguay match in the Round of 16 knockout round.
The Wellington Phoenix played against the Western Sydney Wanderers at Yarrow Stadium on Saturday 4 February 2017. With just 40 percent of the possession the Wanderers beat a 10-man Phoenix team 3-1 in their round 18 A-League match in New Plymouth. Goal scorers for the Wanderers were Brendon Santalab (2) and Nicolás Martínez, and Shane Smeltz for the Phoenix.[16] [17]
In 2002, work on a $17m redevelopment of the park was completed with ground capacity believed to be 25,000. But while 22,500 crammed in for the All Blacks match against Manu Samoa in 2008, the game revealed the stadium could safely hold just 17,000.
Heavy rain or other problems during the match could have resulted in safety issues for people sitting at either end of the ground. Council re-evaluations of the stadium's capacity showed that to meet self-imposed health and safety standards the stadium could hold only 17,000 people. The region's World Cup bid and future ability to attract top games such as another All Blacks test meant a greater capacity was needed.
The upgrade plans included levelling out the northern grass bank to make grass terraces with standing room for 8500 people, up from the estimated 1,500. At the southern end of the ground, 3,200 plastic shell seats replaced the concrete seating underneath the scoreboard. At both the northern and southern ends of the field, concrete walls were removed and the crowd area brought back down to ground level just six metres from the dead-ball line. Additional broadcast media facilities were installed next to existing media boxes. Print media and non-rights holder positions are based in tribunes at the rear of the TSB Bank Stand.[18]
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