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Village Green, Christchurch

1998 establishments in New Zealand2012 disestablishments in New ZealandCricket grounds in New ZealandNew Zealand sports venue stubsSports venues in Christchurch

Village Green was a cricket venue in Christchurch. It is a back-up first-class cricket ground in New Zealand. It was the home of the District's first class cricket team, the State Canterbury Wizards.Village Green is part of the main stadium of Queen Elizabeth II Park, and was often used for inter-provincial competition when the AMI Stadium was unavailable for use. The stadium had been damaged after the 2010 Canterbury earthquake but was able to reopen; it was severely damaged beyond repair after the February 2011 Christchurch earthquake which has damaged the running track and recreation complex. The stadium and pool complex was demolished in 2012 after engineering reports found it beyond repair.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Village Green, Christchurch (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Village Green, Christchurch
Jaynie Parkhouse Drive, Christchurch Travis (Coastal-Burwood Community)

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Wikipedia: Village Green, ChristchurchContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -43.491388888889 ° E 172.70527777778 °
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Address

Jaynie Parkhouse Drive

Jaynie Parkhouse Drive
8083 Christchurch, Travis (Coastal-Burwood Community)
Canterbury, New Zealand
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1981 World Masters Athletics Championships
1981 World Masters Athletics Championships

1981 World Masters Athletics Championships is the fourth in a series of World Masters Athletics Outdoor Championships (called World Veterans Championships, World Veterans Games, or World Veterans Track and Field Championships at the time) that took place in Christchurch, New Zealand, from 7 to 14 January 1981. The turnout was better than expected, despite the remote location, : 177  though no Eastern European or third world nations were represented. : 1 The main venue was Queen Elizabeth II Park, : 2  which was later destroyed by the 2011 Christchurch earthquake. A grass track outside the stadium was used to hold many running events. : 9 : 20 This edition of masters athletics Championships had a minimum age limit of 35 years for women and 40 years for men. The governing body of this series is World Association of Veteran Athletes (WAVA). WAVA was formed during meeting at the inaugural edition of this series at Toronto in 1975, then officially founded during the second edition in 1977, then renamed as World Masters Athletics (WMA) at the Brisbane Championships in 2001. This Championships was organized by WAVA in coordination with a Local Organising Committee (LOC) headed by John Macdonald. John Macdonald also ran in the competition and successfully defended his M45 10K title from 1979. : 177 : 15 In addition to a full range of track and field events, non-stadia events included 10K Cross Country, 10K Race Walk (women), 20K Race Walk (men), and Marathon. Many distance runners also competed in 10K and 25K road races at the 14th Annual World Veterans Distance Running Championships held around Centennial Lagoon in Palmerston North on 3 - 4 January. : 8–9 : 3–5