All systems go for major sports projects

October 25, 2025 BY

Shovels are now in the ground at Waurn Ponds. Image: SUPPLIED

WITH shovels now in the ground at Waurn Ponds, the full suite of sporting facilities promised to the region after the cancellation of the Commonwealth Games is finally in motion.

Construction on the Waurn Ponds Sporting Complex, to be located in Ghazeepore Road, began with a sod turn in early October and is expected to be completed in early 2027.

Member for Western Victoria Gayle Tierney described the milestone as a “community dream taking shape”.

The project will feature six multi-sport courts, a regional-level gymnastics facility and a dance hall.

 

The Waurn Ponds Sporting Complex will include a dance hall and regional-level gymnasium, as well as six multi-sport courts. Image: SUPPLIED

 

Construction on the new hockey facility in Torquay North is expected to wrap up much sooner, with completion anticipated in mid-2026.

The new facilities will sit within the Banyul-Warri Fields community precinct and provide a welcome home for the Torquay Tornadoes Hockey Club, which has long advocated for its own homebase.

Tierney said the project was about “creating a vibrant home for hockey, where athletes of all ages train, compete and celebrate the sport they love”.

“This investment will not only grow the game locally, but also position our region as a destination for top-level sporting events,” she said.

 

The new hockey facilities in Torquay North will sit within the Banyul-Warri Fields community precinct and provide a welcome home for the Torquay Tornadoes Hockey Club, which has long advocated for its own homebase. Photo: SUPPLIED

 

The project will include the installation of lighting, a scoreboard, spectator seating and car parking, alongside the new hockey pitch.

Meanwhile, works on the Armstrong Creek Sports Centre began in May and are expected to wrap up in late-2026.

The centre will feature four indoor multi-sport courts and a civic plaza with basketball hoops, areas for skating and parkour, table tennis tables and informal play spaces.

The project is backed by $6 million in funding from the federal government, pledged by Corangamite MP Libby Coker ahead of the 2022 election.

 

The Armstrong Creek Sports Centre will feature four indoor multi-sport courts and a civic plaza with basketball hoops, areas for skating and parkour, table tennis tables and informal play spaces. Image: SUPPLIED

 

Local basketball and netball players have long called for more courts across the region, a gap the Armstrong Creek (render pictured) and Waurn Ponds stadium projects are expected to help fill. Image: SUPPLIED

 

Ms Coker said it would be a “legacy project” for the growing township.

“The four-court centre is so much needed, and I know local families will embrace it as soon as its doors are open.”

It will be located between the Surf Coast Highway and Barwarre Road, to the north of the Armstrong Creek town centre site, less than 10 minutes from the Waurn Ponds Sporting Complex.

Crews are also onsite at Stead Park in Corio, as a major redevelopment of the facility’s western pitch gets underway. It will be complemented by a two-storey pavilion, with canteen, storage, changerooms and other amenities.

 

An artist’s impression of the new-look Stead Park from the northern terrace. Image: SUPPLIED

 

Works began last month and are also expected to be completed in late-2026.

But while each of these sporting projects progress, questions remain about the future of the site to the south of Waurn Ponds train station that was earmarked for what would have been the Commonwealth Games village.

In March last year, Premier Jacinta Allan announced up to 400 new homes, including about 72 social and affordable homes, would be built at the site, which is bordered by Muri Road and Baanip Boulevard.

 

But questions remain about the future of the site to the south of Waurn Ponds train station that was earmarked for what would have been the Commonwealth Games village. Photo: DEVELOPMENT VICTORIA

 

Little progress has been made since, but Development Victoria confirmed in September that a planning permit for the southern portion of the site has now been approved by the City of Greater Geelong.

Nemesia Kennett, Development Victoria acting executive general manager of housing said the body was working to ensure “appropriate and respectful planning for the site”.

It is unclear when works will begin.

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