Derwent Entertainment Centre

Derwent Entertainment Centre (DEC) is the largest indoor arena in Tasmania and the multi-purpose arena is the primary venue in Hobart for large indoor functions/events. It was constructed in 1989 and is situated in between the waterfront of the River Derwent, the Brooker Highway and Tattersalls Park.

Derwent Entertainment Centre
DEC, The Devils Den
LocationBrooker Highway, Glenorchy, Hobart, Tasmania 7010
Coordinates42°49′27″S 147°16′58″E
OwnerGlenorchy City Council
OperatorGlenorchy City Council
Capacity5,400 (seated)
7,500 (general admission)[1]
SurfaceConcrete
Hardwood (basketball)
Construction
Broke ground1989
Opened1989
Tenants
Hobart Devils (NBL) (1989–1996)
Hobart Chargers (SEABL) (2017–2018)

The DEC can hold up to 7,500 people for events such as concerts with a seating capacity of 5,400. On 2nd July 2020, NBL Owner & Executive Chairman, Larry Kestelman, announced that the Tasmania government had been successful in its bid for a 10th NBL team. This new team will compete in the 2021/22 NBL season and will carry the Tasmania name. It will see Tasmania hosting they're own NBL team for the first time in 25 years, with their home arena announced as the Derwent Entertainment Centre in Hobart.

As part of the agreement between the NBL and the Tasmanian Government, the latter will provide $68.5 million -- $20 million of which will go to a new community four court multisport facility -- for upgrades of the Derwent Entertainment Centre, the side's new home arena. In 2019, it was also the main stadium in the NBL Blitz- Preseason Tournament.

History

The Derwent Entertainment Centre was built and funded in 1989 by the Bi-Centennial Project with the State Government of Tasmania. The DEC was designed by Blythe Yeung and Associates Architect (TAS) in partnership with Peter Hunt Architects of WA and was built by Hansen & Yuncken (TAS). Between 1989 and 1996, it was the home of Tasmania's former NBL team, the Hobart Devils, who moved to the larger and far more modern DEC from their previous home court, the Kingborough Sports Centre which only held 1,800. During Devils home games the DEC was often referred to as the "Devils Den" by local TV commentators. The last NBL game played at the DEC was in December 2005 when the Adelaide 36ers played the Melbourne Tigers in front of 2,416 fans.

Today the DEC still occasionally plays host to international basketball with 4,000 fans attending a game on 17 July 2006 to see the Australian Boomers defeat the New Zealand Tall Blacks 79–78.[2] With talk of expansion in the NBL during 2014 and a possible team based in Hobart in future years, the DEC is said to be the leading candidate for any new team's home venue.

Being the largest capacity indoor venue in Tasmania, it often attracts the "big" name artists that tour the state.

It is also the home of the Music for the Masses, Australia's largest quiz night.

Other uses include clearance sales and Expos.

On 8 December 2009, a public talk, titled "Our Earth, who is responsible?", was held by the Dalai Lama.[3]

In 2017 and 2018, the Hobart Chargers played their home games in the SEABL at the DEC.

In June 2019, it was reported that the National Basketball League were keen on purchasing the DEC from the Glenorchy City Council in order to base a Tasmanian NBL team out of a refurbished stadium.[4]

gollark: Due to the great success of ABR's event bus, I'm implementing a vaguely similar thing for entirely unrelated reasons in RSAPI.
gollark: Using "event bus" technology, and "actual modules", and oh look ABR just DMed me?
gollark: I have tried a *lot* to debug it, and it failed, so I'm just throwing it out and rewriting it more nicely.
gollark: I mean, it mostly does, but the OIR frontend repeatedly does bees.
gollark: I'm currently busy rearchitecting the Random Stuff API, which is 500 lines of poorly designed Python, which would be okay except it doesn't actually work.

See also

References

Media related to Derwent Entertainment Centre at Wikimedia Commons


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