Robina Stadium
Interactive map of Robina Stadium Cbus Super Stadium | |
| Former names | Skilled Park (2006-2014) Gold Coast Stadium |
|---|---|
| Location | Robina, Gold Coast, Queensland |
| Coordinates | 28°4′1″S 153°22′44″E / 28.06694°S 153.37889°E |
| Owner | Queensland Government |
| Operator | Stadiums Queensland |
| Capacity | 27,690 |
| Surface | Grass |
| Record attendance | 27,227 – Titans vs Brisbane, 2009 |
| Public transit | Robina |
| Construction | |
| Broke ground | 2006 |
| Opened | February 2008 |
| Construction cost | A$160 million |
| Architect | HOK Sport |
| Tenants | |
| Gold Coast Titans (NRL) (2008–present) Queensland Country (NRC) (2014) Gold Coast United (A-League) (2009–2012) Gold Coast Sevens (Rugby Sevens) (2011–2014) 2018 Commonwealth Games (Rugby Sevens) (2018) Brisbane Roar (A-League) (2015–2020) Queensland Maroons (State of Origin) (2021) Palm Beach Sharks/Gold Coast City FC (FFA Cup) (2014–2015) | |
Robina Stadium, commercially known as Cbus Super Stadium, is a multi-purpose rectangular stadium in Robina, a suburb of Gold Coast, Queensland. It is the home ground to the National Rugby League's Gold Coast Titans, this venue sometimes hosts the A-League team Brisbane Roar FC.
Robina Stadium is also used for rugby union, association football, rugby sevens, rugby league Test Matches and has hosted Rugby League World Cup matches.
Construction of the venue started in 2006, and finished in February 2008, in time for the 2008 National Rugby League season, when it became the new home of the Titans.
The venue will be used for the 2032 Summer Olympics and will host preliminary Football.