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Location | Hill Street,Wanganui, New Zealand |
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Operator | Cooks Gardens Trust Board |
Capacity | 21,000 |
Surface | Grass field, synthetic athletics track |
Opened | 1896 |
Tenants | |
Wanganui Rugby Football Union, Athletics Wanganui, Cycling Wanganui | |
Ground information | |
International information | |
Only women's Test | 6–10 January 1992:![]() ![]() |
Only WODI | 20 January 1982:![]() ![]() |
As of 1 September 2020 Source:CricketArchive | |
Cooks Gardens is amulti-purpose stadium inWanganui, New Zealand. It is currently used mostly forrugby union matches,athletics and cycling. The main stadium, known as Westpac Stadium, is able to hold 20,700 people with 3,500 covered seats.
Cooks Gardens use as a sporting facility commenced in 1896.[1] Since then Cooks Gardens has been the venue of a number of the world's historic sporting occasions. One of these occasions was on 27 January 1962 when tens of thousands of spectators crammed into Cooks Gardens to witness athletePeter Snell break the world record for the mile.[2] Since then, the four minute mile has been broken 63 times at Cooks Gardens by 41 athletes from various countries around the world.[3]
In 1996 a multimillion-dollar re-development of Cooks Gardens took place. This included an all-weather synthetic 400m athletic track, the first wooden cycling velodrome in New Zealand, and a new grandstand. Redevelopment of Cooks Gardens was completed in 2004 with the construction of two further grandstands.
The ground was also used forcricket from the 1890s until the 1990s.Central Districts used it as one of their home grounds from the 1950s to the 1990s, staging 17first-class and eightList A matches there. A women'sTest match was held there in February 1992, whenNew Zealand playedEngland.[4]
39°56′03″S175°02′57″E / 39.9341°S 175.0493°E /-39.9341; 175.0493