If it were up to me, for about the same price as the present hospital/oval deal, I would have renovated the RAH and built a new multi-sport stadium on the railyard site, keeping AO for cricket and having West Lakes as a second AFL oval and major venue for the western suburbs. SACA would be left with its new western grandstand and its $85 million debt, which Ian McLachlan says SACA can handle 'very comfortably'.
That seems a cheaper alternative with fewer problems and we end up with more facilities. In planning terms a public stadium is a better use of a major gateway site like the railyards than a utility like a hospital, and the site already has excellent transport connections.
What about the overall costs in maintaining the grounds in the long run as well as the financial cost to our sporting teams having to taken on bigger burdens to be at these stadiums(compared to sharing one major venue)?
Melbourne has 13 sporting teams from three major sporting codes using 2.5 stadiums(AAMI park having small capacity)
Adelaide with three teams from two major sporting codes(not including Adelaide United since their home ground is Hindmarsh), should be able to make do with one main venue, and even if it did include Adelaide United.
The Victorians manage perfectly fine and are better off for it.
And like Alexander Downer and others have said, this issue of whether to build a brand new stadium somewhere else, or redevelop Adelaide Oval was decided at the last state election when the Labor government was returned to power.
It's time people who are opposed to the redevelopment accept defeat because your constant attempts to sabotage the redevelopment are not damaging the Rann government or the redevelopment, but the reputation and image of Adelaide and South Australia. Something which this redevelopment and the wider riverbank redevelopment aims to change for the better.