The Parramatta Eels will open the doors of their new James Hardie Centre of Excellence and Community Centre for three days of public tours, offering fans and community members a rare look inside the AUD61 million facility.
While framed as a fan experience, the initiative carries strategic weight for the club and its backers. All proceeds will go to the Parramatta Eels Foundation, which supports academy programs and community engagement projects.
Positioning the tours as both a revenue driver and an awareness tool signals the organisation’s effort to integrate commercial, elite performance, and grassroots objectives.
The Centre of Excellence was jointly funded by the New South Wales and Australian Governments, the Hills Shire Council, and the Parramatta Leagues Club.
This layered funding model showcases how government and local partners are utilising professional sport infrastructure to provide both elite training facilities and public-use amenities.
For policymakers, it demonstrates sport’s role as a vehicle for regional investment and community development. At the same time, for the club, it represents a major capital asset designed to underpin long-term competitiveness.
The facility brings together the men’s and women’s NRL squads, elite pathway programs, and administrative staff under one roof, creating a unified “one-club” structure.
From a high-performance perspective, the complex features five full-sized rugby league fields, a gym, aquatic and rehabilitation areas, and gender-equal elite training facilities.
Its community-facing design includes a 1,500-seat grandstand, multipurpose function space, and a public gym.
Eels CEO Jim Sarantinos described the project as an “investment in future generations,” emphasising its role in bridging professional performance and community access.
The investment strengthens the Eels’ positioning for sponsors and broadcast partners by showcasing state-of-the-art infrastructure and broadening the club’s community reach.
The introduction of tours provides a chance to monetise public interest while also drawing attention to the facility’s role in elite development and local engagement.
For rights holders and government stakeholders, it underscores a growing trend where professional sports facilities are designed not just for athletes, but as multi-use community and commercial hubs.
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