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How Bruce Stadium got here: the long road to a redevelopment masterplan

Decades of deferred maintenance, shifting political priorities and a $250 million funding gap have brought the ACT government to this week's long-awaited blueprint for Canberra's ageing rectangular stadium.

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By Canberra News Desk · Published 4 July 2026, 7:26 am

4 min read

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How Bruce Stadium got here: the long road to a redevelopment masterplan
Photo: Photo by Bhullar Graphic on Pexels

The ACT government on Thursday released its Bruce Stadium redevelopment masterplan, a document that has been in preparation for the better part of three years and that commits the territory to a staged overhaul of a venue that first opened its gates in 1977. The plan outlines a minimum 30,000-seat configuration, upgraded corporate facilities, improved active travel connections along Battye Street, and a new public plaza linking the stadium precinct to the existing Brindabella Business Park on the eastern side of Flemington Road.

The timing is deliberate. Canberra's National Rugby League franchise, the Raiders, have been playing out of a ground whose northern stand was last substantially rebuilt in 2000 for the Sydney Olympics. The Matildas' surge in popularity following the 2023 Women's World Cup generated a waiting list of more than 12,000 people for ACT-based fixtures, and the venue's 25,000-capacity ceiling became impossible to ignore. Territory Infrastructure Minister Chris Steel flagged a masterplan review in the 2023-24 budget, allocating $4.2 million for feasibility work. That work has now concluded.

A venue that outlived three master plans

Bruce Stadium — formally GIO Stadium under its current naming rights deal — sits on Aikman Drive in the inner-north suburb of Bruce, surrounded by the AIS campus, the Australian Institute of Sport's national training base, and the ACT's largest suburban hospital at the Canberra Hospital precinct three kilometres to the south. The geography matters. Any major construction affects traffic on Ginninderra Drive and William Webb Drive during Raiders home games, which routinely draw crowds nudging 24,000.

The territory has been here before. A masterplan produced in 2008 under the Stanhope Labor government proposed a covered 35,000-seat venue at an estimated cost of $180 million. It was shelved within 18 months after the global financial crisis hammered ACT budget projections. A second review commissioned in 2014 under Chief Minister Katy Gallagher recommended a more modest $90 million upgrade; that too stalled, eventually overtaken by the Light Rail Stage 1 project, which consumed the bulk of available infrastructure capital through to its Gungahlin Town Centre opening in April 2019.

The current masterplan is the third. Construction cost inflation since 2019 has fundamentally changed the numbers. The 2014 estimate of $90 million for a partial upgrade would now exceed $160 million on a like-for-like basis, according to Infrastructure Australia's 2025 cost indexing figures. The full preferred option in Thursday's document carries a preliminary cost estimate of $380 million across two stages, with Stage 1 — covering the eastern and southern stands, new changerooms, and disability access upgrades — priced at $210 million.

Where the money might come from

The ACT government's 2026-27 budget, handed down in May, set aside $15 million for precinct planning and early works, leaving a gap of roughly $365 million unfunded. The territory is formally seeking co-investment from the federal government under the National Reconstruction and Infrastructure agenda, and has approached both the Canberra Raiders and Football Australia about private contributions tied to long-term venue tenure agreements. The Raiders' current stadium licence expires in 2029.

Community groups in Bruce and Belconnen have been vocal throughout the consultation process, which ran from October 2025 through February 2026 and received 3,400 written submissions. Residents on Ginninderra Drive consistently raised concerns about construction traffic, and the Belconnen Community Council submitted a formal objection to any proposal that reduced the existing 4,200-space car park footprint without a guaranteed replacement of Transport Canberra bus frequency on the Route 3 and Route 56 corridors.

The masterplan document is now open for a 30-day public comment period, closing on 3 August 2026. The ACT government says it will table a final investment decision in the Legislative Assembly before the end of the 2026 calendar year. Stage 1 construction, if approved and funded, would not begin before mid-2028 — meaning the Raiders will play at least two more seasons in the current configuration before earthworks begin on Aikman Drive.

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Published by The Daily Canberra

Covering news in Canberra. This article was generated by AI from the linked sources and was not reviewed by a human editor before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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