Former names | Apollo Stadium (1969-84) |
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Location | 41 Kingston Avenue, Richmond, South Australia |
Coordinates | 34°56′21″S 138°33′54″E / 34.93917°S 138.56500°E |
Capacity | 1969-84: 4,000 1985-92: 3,500 Basketball / Netball: 3,000 |
Construction | |
Broke ground | 1968 |
Opened | 1969 |
Closed | 1991 (sports & entertainment) |
Demolished | 1997 |
Tenants | |
Adelaide 36ers (NBL) (1982–1991) West Adelaide Bearcats (NBL) (1979–1984) Glenelg Tigers (NBL) (1979) West Torrens / Forestville Eagles (NBL) (1980–1981) |
Apollo Stadium (officially called the Apollo Entertainment Centre) was a multi-purpose indoor arena located at 41 Kingston Avenue, Richmond, South Australia, just 5 minutes from the Adelaide city centre. The stadium had an original seating capacity of 4,000 until the early 1980s when the bench seats were replaced by individual plastic seats giving a reduced seating capacity of 3,000 and an overall capacity of just 3,500.
Opened in 1969, the stadium was named for the Apollo Moon landing of the same year.
During the mid-late 1980s, an increasing number of international music acts began to bypass Adelaide as Apollo was seen as too small. This led to the building of the new 12,000 capacity Adelaide Entertainment Centre which opened in 1991, and in 1992 the venue was superseded as the home of basketball and netball by the new 8,000 seat Clipsal Powerhouse. The building then became a church for a few years but was eventually sold and demolished, with the site subsequently being redeveloped for housing.