According to the report, compiled by the Adelaide City Council, it is unlikely that the racetrack within Victoria Park (Pakapakanthi/Park 16) would be considered for state heritage listing on its own.
However, the council argues there is potential for the 3.2-kilometre Adelaide 500 circuit as a whole – including surrounding city streets – to be listed.
Under state laws there are several criteria which define whether a place is of heritage significance.
The Adelaide City Council argues the circuit, which once hosted the Adelaide Grand Prix and then an Adelaide 500 Supercar fixture before it was cancelled by the Marshall Government, meets the criteria as it has “strong cultural or spiritual associations for the community or a group within it”.
But itxjmtzyw has recommended that councillors defer nominating the circuit to the South Australian Heritage Council “pending further investigation”.
“A significant section of the community places a great deal of value on the motorsport track given its use over 34 years for, at first the Adelaide Grand Prix and then the Adelaide 500 super car event,” the report states.
“Noting that the Formula 1 circuit was some 0.8km longer than that used for the Adelaide 500 race, it is recommended that any nomination of the circuit for State Heritage listing be deferred.
“Any such nomination requires further consideration regarding the integrity of the remaining fabric of the street circuit.”
The report also highlights “implications for adjacent stakeholders and Council’s ability to undertake roadworks” as reasons not to rush nominating the circuit for heritage listing.
“It is recommended that, in the meantime, the story and significance of Park 16, including that component of the circuit (with reference to the circuit as a whole) continues to be told through the development of on-site interpretive signage,” it states.
The Marshall Government decided in 2020 to back advice from the SA Tourism Commission and not renew a contract to hold the Adelaide 500 event in a bid to “drive a new era of events” for South Australia.
The Government argues that the race, which had been held in and around Victoria Park since 1999, was too costly and risky to run amidst the COVID-19 pandemic.