Mars (Eureka) Stadium aerial 2022 | |
![]() Interactive map of Eureka Stadium | |
| Former names | Northern Oval #1, AUSTAR Arena and Eureka Stadium |
|---|---|
| Location | Midland Highway,Wendouree, Victoria, Australia |
| Coordinates | 37°32′22″S143°50′53″E / 37.53944°S 143.84806°E /-37.53944; 143.84806 |
| Public transit | BusCDC Route 30 andCDC Route 12 |
| Owner | City of Ballarat |
| Operator | City of Ballarat |
| Seating type | Individual |
| Capacity | 11,000 (5,127 seated)[1] |
| Record attendance | 10,412 (23 April 2022) |
| Field size | 160 m × 129 m (525 ft × 423 ft)[2] |
| Field shape | Oval |
| Surface | Grass |
| Scoreboard | Video-electronic (50 m2 [540 sq ft]) |
| Construction | |
| Broke ground | 1990 |
| Built | 1990 |
| Renovated | 2016–17, 2020–21, 2025-26 |
| Expanded | 2017 |
| Construction cost | $21.976 million (AUD) (Stage 1); $6.35 million (AUD) (Stage 2); and $80 million (AUD) (Stage 3 (Including the regional athletics centre)) |
| Architect | Stages 1 and 2Peddle Thorp (Melbourne), Stage 3Cox Architecture and Morton Dunn |
| Builder | Stage 1 - AW Nicholson Constructions, Stage 3 - Kane Constructions and AW Nicholson Constructions |
| Project manager | Stage 1 - Atelier Projects |
| Tenants | |
| North Ballarat Football Club (VFL/BFL) (1990–) GWV Rebels (NAB League) (1993–) North Ballarat Cricket Club (BCA) (1993–) Western Bulldogs (AFL) (2017–) Western United FC (A-League) (2019–) Western Bulldogs (AFLW) (2022–) | |
Eureka Stadium, known commercially asMars Stadium, is an oval-shaped sports stadium located in the Eureka Sports Precinct ofWendouree, 2.9 km (1.8 mi) north of the city ofBallarat,Victoria, Australia.
The first permanent oval used by theNorth Ballarat Football Club was established in 1963 in the centre of the defunctBallarat Showgrounds harness racing track formerly used by the Ballarat and District Trotting Club as its main venue between 1952 and 1966. A new all-weather oval (dimensions 170 by 140 metres (560 ft × 460 ft)) replaced the harness racing track in 1990, complemented by a new sports club and club pavilion (The North Ballarat Sports Club) which was constructed on private land to the oval's northern flank.
Between 1990 and 2015 the oval was used for a range of purposes although mainly as anAustralian rules football andcricket venue. It annually hosted theBallarat Gift (Athletics Carnival) and the Ballarat Agricultural and Pastoral Society's show-ring events during their annual Show.

During the 1990s and early 2000s various proposals to playAFL football at the ground had been discussed by the Ballarat football community, media, and business groups in isolation. However, in 2008 a proposal to develop the stadium for use byAFL team North Melbourne and the North BallaratVFL team was put forward to the Victorian State Government by the Ballarat Council and the North Ballarat Sports Club. The proposal received support from the ALP Government during the 2010 State Election with the LNP opposition only providing conditional support. After the election the new LNP Government quickly abandoned the proposal. The Ballarat Council, media, sports groups, tourism and business groups continued a united lobby under a promotional campaign titled "Think Big Ballarat" until the 2014 State election when the ALP State Opposition announced that they would fund the development as an AFL Level 3 stadium with the first AFL seasonal game to be played from 2017 if elected. Once elected, the new ALP government immediately committed funding in the 2015 State Budget allowing the first stage of development of the stadium to commence.
In order to accommodate grandstands and other facilities the oval was completely rebuilt and re-oriented to a NE-SW axis in preparation for the first stage of construction. The rebuilt oval incorporated state of the art irrigation and drainage, a 4000-capacity grassed spectator berm on its South-Eastern flank, and four 37 metres (121 ft) light towers partially rigged to illuminate the playing arena to 300 lux (sufficient for non-televised State level Australian Football night competition).
From April 2017 to June 2018 the City of Ballarat and North Ballarat Sports Club negotiated for Council to purchase the club's freehold land title to ensure that the newly built stadium and existing sports club would be co-developed and future-managed as a singular entity. In June 2017 naming rights for the venue were granted toMars Confectionery Australian division.
The facility today remains the home of theNorth Ballarat Sports Club including theGreater Western Victoria Rebels of theTalent League and theNorth Ballarat City FC of theBallarat Football League. It is also used as a venue forCentral Highlands Football League andBallarat Football League for both seasonal games and finals in addition to hosting twoAFL and oneAFLW seasonal games per-year since 2017.

In 2006Australian Football League (AFL) clubNorth Melbourne established a successful partnership with the North Ballarat Football Club to enable its reserve-grade players to play alongside the North Ballarat players in theVictorian Football League. North Melbourne also played pre-season games in at the ground during this time. In 2014 theVictorian Government and AFL approved the request of fellow AFL club theWestern Bulldogs at least two AFL premiership matches at the ground from 2017, though without an affiliation with North Ballarat as North Melbourne had. In 2015 North Melbourne was forced to cease its association with Ballarat and were subsequently contracted to playing three of their seasonal AFL premiership matches inHobart,Tasmania.
In August 2017, the Bulldogs hosted the first AFL match for premiership points at Mars Stadium againstPort Adelaide, with the latter winning the match by 17 points. The Bulldogs have also played pre-season and regular-season AFL men's andAFL Women's games at the ground. In November 2021, theWestern Bulldogs and the Ballarat Council announced that the club would continue playing two AFL and one AFLW home games per season.[3] The deal was later extended for a further three seasons to the end of the 2027 season.[4]
In July 2021, the stadium hosted the Round 17 AFL match between theGWS Giants and theGold Coast Suns that was originally scheduled to be held in Sydney when aCOVID-19 outbreak in New South Wales necessitated a last-minute change of venue.[5]
The stadium hosted theassociation football (soccer)A-League clubWestern United FC who played 3-4 Victorian home game fixtures each year in between 2019 and 2024. The first game was played againstWellington Phoenix on 28 December 2019[6] with the Phoenix winning the match 3–1 in front of 5,084 fans. This arrangement ceased when a new dedicated home soccer stadium opened inTarneit in Western Melbourne. In October 2020 A-League players voted Eureka Stadium as having equal to or the best surface of allA-League venues for that year.[7]
From 1990 to 2015 the main oval hosted Ballarat Cricket Association matches with the individual highest batting score on the ground (226 runs) being accredited to Mr Tom MacDonald (of the Wendouree Cricket Club) on the 18th February 2006 against the North Ballarat Cricket Club. The main oval has not been used for cricket since redevelopment in 2016, however provision was included with its reconstruction to permit the use of drop in wickets to be installed if the venue hosts future large scale cricket games. The Ballarat North Cricket Club currently play home games at the Frank Bourke Oval (Also referred to as the Number 2 Oval) adjacent to the stadium, while First Class cricket matches in Ballarat are generally hosted at the smaller historicEastern Oval which has recently undergone a series ofCricket Australia First Grade endorsed upgrades.
The stadium successfully hostedMelbourne RebelsSuper Rugby AU pre-seasonal and seasonal games againstQueensland Reds and theDurban Sharks during 2019 and 2020 respectively, andMelbourne Storm andNewcastle Knights of the Australian National Rugby League in February 2022 in a pre-season trial game before 5,127 fans.

In 2015 the Ballarat Council prepared a development document titled the "Ballarat Major Events Precinct Master Plan" that detailed plans for long-term multi-staged development of the overall sports precinct which encompasses Eureka Stadium, the former Ballarat Showgrounds, neighbouring sports ovals, netball courts and club pavilions as well as the re-development and expansion of the former Wendouree Netball Centre to become theBallarat Sports Events Centre.[8]
In June 2015 theVictorian government committed $38.5 million to the initial development of the precinct, with approximately half of the funding allocated to the first stage of development of the Eureka Stadium.[9]
Planning for construction was significantly fast-tracked, occurring whilst the reconstruction of the oval was underway during 2015. Initial design concepts for the grandstands were released for public feedback in late 2015 resulting in significant changes to the final design before approval in May 2016. Almost immediately, tenders for construction were announced and construction works commenced for a new main grandstand and terraced seating for 5000, player races, a video scoreboard, new coaches boxes and media broadcast suites. These works took one year to be completed with the official handover occurring in July 2017.
In May 2018 the government funded a $500,000 Ballarat Council study to identify works considered necessary to immediately address the redeveloped facility's immediate needs in addition to making recommendations for the stadiums long-term development. The report was submitted to the State Government and informed parts of the Victorian State Government's "Home Ground Advantage - Victoria's Major Stadia Strategy" document.[10]

From September 2020, $6.6 million was allocated to convert player and umpire/referee change-rooms as uni-sex facilities, build two new covered entrances with ticketing facilities, a new food and beverage outlet, permanent public conveniences at the southern boundary of the stadium, and partial concreting of the south-east viewing berm. These works being completed in March 2022 for $6.35 million, some $265,000 under the allocated budget.

Since 2018 sports users (in particular the AFL and National Soccer League) and television sports commentators have publicly criticized the stadium's present sports field lighting citing ineffectiveness during inclement weather and unsuitability for digital television broadcasts. In January 2022 the Ballarat Council lobbied the State and Federal Governments for $3.5 million (AUD) funding to replace the stadium's lighting with four 50 metre towers fitted with modern LED fittings.[11] To date no .unding has been allocated or committed to achieve this

On 11 April 2024 the state government announced the construction of an additional 5,000 permanent undercover seats on the eastern side of the stadium on the area formerly occupied by the main standing berm to increase the seating capacity to 10,000. The new stands will include public amenities and two additional changerooms and player races to enable the stadium to support multiple teams supporting expanded game day and public events. Additionally, the standing embankment on the Southern boundary of the stadium will be expanded and feature a new significantly larger video scoreboard to replace the older board which was installed in 2017. The older board will be repurposed to the adjacent athletics centre which is presently under construction. Artwork featuring local indigenous themes will be included on brickwork, paving and the new scoreboard.[12][13] This announcement was accompanied with architect's renders of the proposed design of the stands and other reconfigurations. Construction of the new Athletics Centre and main stadium upgrades commenced in March 2025 with all works anticipated for completion in the second half of the 2026 calendar year.[14][15]
Top 5 Attendance Records
| No. | Date | Teams | Sport | Competition | Crowd |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 23 April 2022 | Western Bulldogs v.Adelaide | Australian Rules Football | AFL | 10,412 |
| 2 | 25 August 2024 | Western Bulldogs v.Greater Western Sydney | Australian Rules Football | AFL | 10,224 |
| 3 | 20 May 2023 | Western Bulldogs v.Adelaide | Australian Rules Football | AFL | 10,114 |
| 4 | 19 August 2017 | Western Bulldogs v.Port Adelaide | Australian Rules Football | AFL | 10,087 |
| 5 | 24 March 2024 | Western Bulldogs v.Gold Coast Suns | Australian Rules Football | AFL | 9,752 |