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Dunc Gray Velodrome

Coordinates:33°54′27″S150°59′55″E/ 33.90750°S 150.99861°E/-33.90750; 150.99861
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Dunc Gray Velodrome
Map
LocationCarysfield Road,Bass Hill,Sydney
Coordinates33°54′27″S150°59′55″E/ 33.90750°S 150.99861°E/-33.90750; 150.99861
Capacity3,150
5,821 (2000 Summer Olympics)
SurfaceBaltic Pine
Construction
Broke groundMay 1998
Opened26 January 2000
Construction costA$42m
ArchitectRon Webb (track)

Dunc Gray Velodromeis a velodrome located atBass Hillapproximately five kilometres north west of theSydneysuburb ofBankstown.Thecyclingvenue for the2000 Summer Olympics,the Dunc Gray Velodrome was opened on 28 November 1999 with an opening ceremony which included performances by local talent Darren Sharp and other community groups. The Velodrome is named afterDunc Gray,the first Australian to win a cycling gold medal at theOlympic GamesinLos Angeles in 1932.[1]

At the time of its construction, theState Governmentowned the velodrome. Bankstown Council managed the velodrome under a sublease. In 1998, the council sublet the velodrome to Bankstown Sports Club, under a 21-year sublease. The council resumed control of the velodrome in 2019.[1]

Construction

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The Dunc Gray Velodrome was built as atrack cyclingvenue for theSydney 2000 Olympics,[2]construction of the velodrome, as well as an 800m Criterium Practice Track, commenced in May 1998 and finished in November 1999, at a cost of $42 million. It currently has aseating capacityof 3,150, but was expanded to 5,821 seats to cater for the 2000 Olympics.

At 250 metres length, 60 kilometres worth of Baltic Pine (Finland) were used in its composition. The track bends at a maximum angle of 42° degrees, while the straights are at 12.5°. The Safety Track is 5 metres wide and the racing surface is of 7 metres width.

Events

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The first major international cycling event ever held was the Oceania International Cycling Grand Prix from 8 to 12 December 1999 – an official pre-Olympic test event.

In April 2000, it hosted the 'Bankstown Millennium Buzz' performance in celebrating the Olympics and the millennium year. It hosted six days of track cycling events at the2000 Summer Olympics,as well as Paralympic cycling.

In October 2007, The Dunc Gray Velodrome hosted the 2007 UCI Track Cycling Masters World Championships, for riders 30+ years of age.

The Dunc Gray Velodrome

See also

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References

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  1. ^abJames Beech (11 August 2015)."Sydney Olympics: Future plans for Dunc Gray Velodrome 15 years after Olympics".Canterbury-Bankstown Express.Retrieved25 June2016.
  2. ^"2000Official Report of the XXVII Summer Olympiad. Volume One - Preparing for the Games.Sydney Organising Committee for the Olympic Games (2001), p. 373 "(PDF).Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 25 August 2016.Retrieved25 June2016.
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