Fairfield Showground

Fairfield Showground is a multi-purpose indoor-outdoor venue situated in Prairiewood, New South Wales, Australia. Since in the 1970s, it has been a popular venue for multicultural festivals, horse racing, carnivals, markets and club meets attracting as many as 20,000 people. Situated in western Sydney, the showground has around 10,000 sqm of undercover exhibition space and it is overall 33 hectares (79 acres) in size, with parking spaces for over 600 vehicles.

Fairfield Showground
Location443 Smithfield Road, Prairiewood
Coordinates33°52′00″S 150°54′20″E
OwnerFairfield City Council
SurfaceIndoor and outdoor
Opened1950s
Website
Official Website

One of the largest festival precinct in Greater Western Sydney, the showground was developed in the 1950s and is surrounded by eucalyptus bushland, with Orphan School Creek meandering on the north.[1]

Markets

Saturday markets.

Markets are held at Fairfield Showground every Saturday from 9am to 4pm in the sheltered area behind the grandstands and would have thousands of visitors each week. The markets are popular in the region, with more than 600 stalls and have free entry. The markets mainly consist of toy stores, food booths, dollar stores, sporting gear shops, grocery, hardware, gardening, jewelry, and a few pet stores. Products are sold firsthand.

Entertainment is also provided for children, where they include pony rides, merry-go-round, clown heads, a jumping castle, and a mini-train ride system which circulates the bushy surroundings (adults are also admitted on the ride).[2]

A flea market, a type of bazaar, was launched on November 2016, and it attracts hundreds of people, running every Wednesdays.[3] Aussie Night Markets are held every Tuesday each month at 5pm, which feature international cuisines, such as Turkish, Korean, Chinese and Mexican with over 40 multicultural street foods and dessert vendors, 20 craft stores, DJ performances, and also a boutique retail section.[4]

Facilities

The adjacent Parklands Function Centre is used for engagement parties, wedding receptions, anniversaries, school reunions and award presentation nights for up to 250 people. There is also an 18-hole public golf course, a driving range and a harness racing track with its own covered grandstand.

Culture

The annually held Assyrian New Year festival.

Assyrian Australians celebrate the Assyrian New Year annually on 1 April, in Fairfield Showground. Thousands attend the New Year festival and it usually features music and theatrical performances, traditional dancers, food stalls and fireworks.[5] Former Australian prime minister Tony Abbott[6] and other politicians such as Chris Bowen, Craig Kelly, Tanya Plibersek, Chris Hayes and former NSW premier Bob Carr have attended the festival and made a speech.[7] The Assyrian Australian Latin pop band Azadoota regularly performs in the annual festival.[8]

The showground is also home to the Australia's first, largest and longest-running Eid Festival, which commenced in 1987. The festival has grown to now cater for tens of thousands of Muslims and non-Muslims and has included as guests Yusuf Islam, famous Australian footballer, Hazem El Masri, the then Governor-General of Australia, Michael Jeffery and the previous Premier of New South Wales, Kristina Keneally.[9]

The Chinese New Year is annually celebrated in the showground with over 60,000 people attending.[10] More than 40,000 people attend the annual Vietnamese New Year, which is held for three days from Friday to Sunday. Both feature fireworks, amusement rides and cultural performances such as dragon dancing.[11]

The Fairfield Easter Fair will be held annually in the showground for three days starting from 2018 to cater those in the area, which are distant from the Sydney Royal Easter Show in Sydney Olympic Park. With a free admission, it will open on Easter from 10am to 10pm, Friday to Sunday, and it will feature over 20 amusement rides (such as Bumper cars), blacksmith exhibition, farm animals, easter egg hunt, sheep shearing, reptile shows and fireworks, among many things.[12] A Uruguayan festival, which has been running for nearly three decades and raised $2 million of charity, features hundreds of performers and live music acts, is held annually on August and it's one of the biggest outdoor Latin festivals in Sydney's West.[13]

Furthermore, international artists such as AC/DC have performed in the venue in 1975, playing songs from their debut album High Voltage.[14]

Proposals

Harness racing on the site's tracks.

Proposed sites of the precinct revealed in 2016 and 2017 included an international size football field (which can be used for AFL), coaching clinics, another pavilion building, extra parking spaces, community gardens, an international-sized stadium (with a capacity of about 10,000 to cater south-western Sydney and costing $8.5 million),[15] walking and cycling tracks in the bush surrounds, and an all-weather synthetic field. Frank Carbone, mayor of Fairfield LGA, stated “The redevelopment will allow us to bring some of the biggest festivals and events to southwest Sydney, as well as major sporting events.”[16]

Councillors supported a call by Cr Carbone for staff to develop a plan that aims to turn the site into a “premier location which brings the community together for celebration, shopping, and sporting excellence”. Carbone concluded that it would be developed into an important place for people outside of the area with the possibility of it to grow into an international facility.[17] An outdoor cinema was planned on March 2017, which would accommodate up to 10,000 people and be an ideal spot for film premieres.[18]

Fairfield City Council will make its sporting facilities gettable for any bid for Sydney to host the Commonwealth Games. Frank Carbone has said Fairfield Showground should be included in any Games proposal saying, “We are looking at investing almost $10 million into the showground, and also seeking more funding for further upgrades”. The instance to host the 2026 or 2030 Games in greater western Sydney was put to Premier Gladys Berejiklian and Sports Minister Stuart Ayres.[19]

Access

The Liverpool-Parramatta Rapid Bus Transitway has a station close to the showground, as well as a number of encircling bus stops that belong to Transit Systems Sydney. Although the main entry is from Smithfield Road, there is another entrance to the showground from Moonlight Road, on the head of Greenfield Road, to the west, which feature a sign indicating the showground's entry.

See also

References

  1. George V (1991) Fairfield – A History of the District – second edition Fairfield City Council
  2. Fairfield City Markets
  3. Trash and treasure has never been more popular
  4. Multicultural food and desserts on the Night Markets menu by Winsome Walker from The Daily Telegraph
  5. Rizk, Rita (29 March 2016). "Thousands to attend Assyrian New Year festivities in Fairfield". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 25 July 2016.
  6. McMah, Lauren. "Thousands of people celebrate Assyrian New Year at Fairfield Showground". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 25 July 2016.
  7. "Celebrating the Assyrian New Year Festival 6766 in Sydney". Assyrian Universal Alliance. Retrieved 25 July 2016.
  8. Azadoota - Triple J
  9. Multicultural Eid Festival and Fair
  10. Lunar New Year 2018: Your guide to what's on in Sydney to celebrate Year of the Dog by the Sydney Morning Herald
  11. Vietnamese Festival kicks off in Fairfield tomorrow by The Daily Telegraphy
  12. Locals embrace first festival by Chris Boulous
  13. Uruguayos Unidos brings the Latin rhythm of South America for a party to remember by The Daily Telegraph
  14. AC/DC at Fairfield? Yes, it happened. by Fairfield Champion
  15. Fairfield City to unveil plans for boutique football stadium for A-League expansion by The Sydney Morning Herald
  16. Exclusive: Fairfield Showground proposal revealed by The Daily Telegraph
  17. Fairfield Showground could be biggest festival precinct in South West by The Daily Telegraph
  18. Open-air movie theatre planned for Fairfield Showground by The Daily Telegraph
  19. Fairfield keen for some of the action of a western Sydney Commonwealth Games by The Daily Telegraph
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