![]() 1955 Grey Cup at Empire Stadium | |
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Location | EastHastings Street, Vancouver |
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Owner | City of Vancouver |
Capacity | 32,729 |
Surface | Natural grass (1954–1969) Artificial turf (1970–1993) |
Construction | |
Opened | start 1954; 71 years ago (1954) |
Demolished | 1993; 32 years ago (1993) |
Tenants | |
BC Lions (CFL) (1954–1982) Vancouver Whitecaps (NASL) (1974–1983) Vancouver Royals (USA/NASL) (1967–1968) |
Empire Stadium was amulti-purpose stadium that stood at thePacific National Exhibition site atHastings Park inVancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Track and field andCanadian football, as well as soccer,rugby and musical events, were held at the stadium. The stadium was originally constructed for the1954 British Empire and Commonwealth Games. The stadium (which sat 32,375 upon opening, but 30,229 after 1974) hosted bothElvis Presley andThe Beatles. It saw most of its use as the home of theBC Lions of theCFL from 1954 to 1982, in which the venue also played host to the firstGrey Cup game held west of Ontario in1955. Empire Stadium also hosted the Grey Cup game in1958,1960,1963,1966,1971, and1974; seven times in total.
Empire Stadium was often home to theShrine Bowl Provincial Championship for provincial senior high school.[1]
The stadium was also home to theVancouver Whitecaps of theNorth American Soccer League during the 1970s and early 1980s, as well as theVancouver Royals of the same league for their only year of play in 1968.
Just before the1966 Grey Cup game, the stadium had the new "gooseneck" or "slingshot" goal posts erected invented by Jim Trimble and Joel Rottman, marking the first time these goalposts were used at any level of football in a championship game. They were first used a week earlier at Montreal'sAutostade for the 1966 Eastern Conference final; this model goalpost would soon become the standard design in the NFL and CFL. In 1970, it became the first facility in Canada to have artificial playing surface installed made by3M, under the brand name "Tartan Turf".
Both the Lions and Whitecaps moved toBC Place Stadium for the 1983 season. The stadium was demolished in the early 1990s. The site served as a parking lot for the neighbouring Pacific National Exhibition as well asPlayland for many years before being converted to a soccer field and track on the site of the old field.
WithBC Place Stadium undergoing renovations in 2010 and 2011, theBC Lions andVancouver Whitecaps played their home games atEmpire Field, a temporary field constructed on the former grounds of Empire Stadium.[2][3][4] After the renovations to BC Place were complete, the temporary stadium was removed. The park and sports fields were restored for community use.
Vancouver hosted the1954 British Empire and Commonwealth Games in 1954 at Empire Stadium. The most famous event of the games was the One Mile Race in which bothJohn Landy andRoger Bannister ran the distance inunder four minutes. The race's end is memorialized in a statue of the two (with Landy glancing over his shoulder, thus losing the race), that stood outside the stadium until its demolition. The statue formerly stood near the south end of Hastings St., but has since been moved to thePacific National Exhibition north entrance just metres from where the feat took place at the newEmpire Fields.
49°16′57.5″N123°1′59.6″W / 49.282639°N 123.033222°W /49.282639; -123.033222