Auchenflower Hosted the Australian Open Long Before Melbourne

Auchenflower has never needed to shout to be noticed. It’s a suburb of river breezes and long afternoons, where streets rise gently away from the Brisbane River and the city feels close but not quite on top of you. But tucked inside that calm, residential reputation is a sporting fact that still catches people off guard: Auchenflower once hosted the tournament we now call the Australian Open.



It was not an exhibition. It was not a warm-up event. It was the real thing in its early form, when the event was still known as the Australasian Championships and moved between cities and venues.

Before the Australian Open had a permanent home

The modern Australian Open is famously tied to Melbourne Park. But for decades, the tournament didn’t have a single base at all.

On the Australian Open’s official history, the early event is described as the Australasian Championships, and it “bounced around” various cities and venues for years before settling permanently in Melbourne in 1972.

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That travelling tradition is what created a rare opening for Brisbane — and for Auchenflower — to enter national tennis history in a way that feels almost unbelievable today.

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Auchenflower’s moment in the spotlight

Queensland’s editions of the tournament were held in the Brisbane suburb of Auchenflower in 1907 and 1915. Those two dates are a big deal. They place Auchenflower among the tournament’s early host locations, long before the Australian Open settled into a single permanent home.

That history is also confirmed in tournament records, with Auchenflower, Brisbane, listed as the host location for both the 1907 and 1915 championships.

The Auchenflower courts were opened with enthusiasm in 1904, but rain curtailed the official opening celebrations. It’s a small anecdote, but it tells you something important: these weren’t improvised lawns scratched into existence for a one-off tournament.

The courts were significant enough to be noted in newspaper reporting of the time. Auchenflower’s tennis story begins with the establishment of courts in the suburb in 1904.

Grass courts and a very different tournament era

In 1907 and 1915, the championships played in Auchenflower would have felt very different to the Australian Open we recognise today. The event was smaller, the travel harder, the draw less international — but the prestige was real.

The 1907 tournament is recorded as being played on grass courts at Auchenflower in Brisbane. The 1915 edition is also recorded as being played on outdoor grass courts in Auchenflower.

That grass-court detail matters because it reminds readers what early tennis demanded: a different pace, different footwork, and a different relationship between sport and setting. The surface itself belonged to the landscape in a way hard courts don’t.

Auchenflower as part of Brisbane’s river suburbs story

It’s hard not to see a pattern when you look at where Brisbane’s famous tennis moments have happened. Auchenflower sits close to the river and close to the city — the kind of place where organised recreation could thrive early. In later decades, Brisbane’s major tennis venue shifted to nearby Milton. Different suburb, different era — but a similar relationship to access, crowds and public life.

Auchenflower’s tournament years show a version of Brisbane that doesn’t always appear in the usual sporting narratives: a city capable of hosting national-level events much earlier than people assume.

Methodist Home Mission tennis players from England in Brisbane, 1912. Photographed at the residence of Rev. W. H. Harrison in Auchenflower. | Photo Credit: State Library of Queensland

What to take from Auchenflower’s tennis past

Auchenflower doesn’t need a stadium today to prove it mattered then. Its tennis story is a quiet Brisbane story: a suburb by the river that once hosted the national championships during the tournament’s travelling years.

And if you ever hear someone say Brisbane was never part of tennis history, Auchenflower has an answer: It already has been.



Published 15-Jan-2026


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