The stadium opened to the public on 23 July 1949 when it hosted the Swindon Robins speedway team; greyhound racing followed three years later on 1 November 1952.[6] Swindon had two earlier short-lived greyhound track venues, in the village ofWroughton and near the town centre in Edinburgh Street, but both had disappeared by the mid-thirties.[7] The stadium occupied a rural setting south of Lady Lane and was named after the Blunsdon Abbey estate in Blunsdon St Andrew, a Victorian estate which had seen its main house destroyed by fire in 1904.[8]
The track initially raced as an independent, with 2,000 people attending on 1 November 1952 to watch a greyhound called Don't Care win a 324-yard race in a time of 19.02 secs at odds of 6–1.[6][9] The stadium came into the hands of the Bristol Greyhound Racing Association, owners ofOxford andEastville (Bristol) stadiums at that time. This led to the track becoming part of theNational Greyhound Racing Club during April 1968. The Silver Plume competition arrived in the same year, as the track's principal event.[10] Another independent track to the northwest of Swindon opened during the sixties at Common Platt but had little effect on the business of its larger neighbour.[11]
In 1983ADT (British Car Auctions) purchased the Abbey Stadium and used its large car park as a base for their sales. Other competitions at the track were the Grand National of the West, Pride of the West and the Jubilee Stakes.[12] In 1997 the BS Group sold their Eastville stadium and bought Swindon from ADT. The entire Bristol operation including the racing office, bookmakers, trainers, theWestern Two Year Old Produce Stakes and the BAGS contract transferred to Swindon.[13]
The BS Group became Stadia UK and then Gaming International, and after the closure ofWalthamstow stadium in 2008 the track hosted theArc competition. In 2018 the stadium signed a deal withArena Racing Company to race a Monday, Wednesday and Friday matinée meeting every week.[14] Later in 2018, the Arc competition was discontinued due to expected track changes, but following the sudden closure ofTowcester, leading owner John Turner stepped in to save theOaks with a late scheduling in December.[15]
The stadium signed a new media rights five-year contract extension with Arena Racing Company to run from January 2025.[16]
A redevelopment has been planned since June 2007.[17][18] The owners, Gaming International, were granted outline planning permission in 2008 to build houses on part of the site and after several revisions, outline permission was again granted in 2015, for up to 100 houses and a care home.[19] Work began on housing in November 2016 but the stadium plans were delayed.[20][21] In 2019, the original plans to reposition the stadium and track were scrapped, and the track was reduced in circumference from 463 metres by creating two new bends inside the old circumference, making way for housing. The 509 race distance was also scrapped.[22] The planning authority disallowed any further housing additions until progress was made with replacing the existing buildings.[23]
The stadium and track, therefore, remained in its original position with plans to install prefabricated buildings in place of the existing buildings.[22][24] From 2021 to 2023, the speedway team did not enter the British leagues due to uncertainty surrounding the ongoing changes.[25][4] In December 2022, the stadium continued to experience a stand-off between the council and builders Taylor Wimpey over perimeters and expected redevelopment. Clarke Osborne of Gaming International issued a press release with a call for sites, stating that it wanted to find ground for a 5,000 capacity stadium to host speedway, karting and car racing.[26] However, similar statements had been issued in previous years by Gaming International/BS Group forMilton Keynes Greyhound Stadium,Reading Stadium andEastville Stadium, with the industry remaining sceptical.[27]
In March 2025, Swindon Stadium announced that it would close at the end of the year. The announcement was not a surprise because it followed on from the previous closures relating to Clarke Osborne and Gaming International/Stadia UK (formerly BS Group). Stadiums at Bristol, Reading, Milton Keynes and Poole were all closed by the company.[3][27]