The Home of the Matildas’ brand new elite training facility is set to welcome players after it was officially opened by Steve Dimopoulos, Victorian Minister for Tourism, Sport and Major Events on Monday 3rd July at the La Trobe University Sports Park in Bundoora, Victoria.
The $57 million facility is one of the first and largest football-specific infrastructure projects in Australia’s history and a significant accomplishment for the sport in the country, supported and embraced by the Victorian Government and Federal Government.
The facility provides a world-class elite training environment that is for the CommBank Matildas’ exclusive use whenever they are in camp and is also the permanent home for Football Victoria’s administration and representative teams for women and men of all ages; providing year-round access for young juniors, youth and elite teams with training and match facilities for the entire Victorian football community.
La Trobe University students will also benefit from the partnership with access to many of the facilities, as well as student placements and research studies providing real-life training and benefits to all athletes and officials around high-performance training and recovery, sports science education and research.
The Home of the Matildas will deliver an experience unparalleled in Australian football and has been designed with the aspiration of becoming the finest female-focused facility in Asia, a living testament to Football Victoria’s goal of achieving gender equity in football by 2027.
As the Principal Design Consultant, Populous created a modern, centralised, gender neutral, facility to support a ‘Football for All’ venue for players and officials of the ‘World Game’.
Populous senior principal Belinda Goh said the intersection of universal design principles and designing for equity were used to deliver the project vision and unite a football organisation into a new home.
“Working together with a range of stakeholders over the life of the project, we designed and delivered solutions for equitable access and universal spaces for a flexible age group from young children to elite.
“Populous brought our deep understanding of the current and future needs of an elite training facility to the project.
“The mixed-use, flexible design shows that women’s teams don’t necessarily need different, stand-alone facilities, rather a commitment to equitable access. It becomes more efficient and affordable in the long-term if a ‘designing for all’ approach is adopted.