Why Brisbane’s Biggest Summer Tennis Week Belongs to Tennyson

If you follow the Brisbane River through the city’s southern bends, Tennyson can feel like one of those suburbs people “pass by” rather than “go to.” It’s quiet, riverside, and tucked between larger neighbours — until January arrives, and the world starts turning up with racquets, broadcast crews and centre-court tickets. That moment happens at the Queensland Tennis Centre (QTC), home of the Brisbane International each summer.



But what makes Tennyson’s tennis story unusual isn’t only the tournament schedule. It’s what the suburb represents: a place where the former Tennyson Power Station site was redeveloped into a purpose-built sporting precinct.

A river suburb built for a very different kind of power

Before it became the home of top-level tennis in Queensland, Tennyson was linked to another kind of large-scale energy. 

The Queensland Tennis Centre was built on the site of the former Tennyson Power Station. The power station was decommissioned, and the site was later redeveloped, including the construction of the tennis centre.

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That transformation is part of what gives Tennyson its distinctive identity. Few modern sporting venues are so clearly connected to a former industrial footprint, especially one directly beside the river.

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Photo Credit: Wikipedia/Public Domain

Queensland Tennis Centre: built to host the world

QTC includes a centre court stadium plus 23 International Tennis Federation (ITF) standard courts and supporting facilities. The centre’s focal point is Pat Rafter Arena, a 5,500-seat stadium with corporate suites designed for major tournaments and events.

Surrounding it is a network of courts across clay, grass and cushion acrylic (plexicushion) surfaces. Both the Queensland Tennis Centre and Stadiums Queensland describe this as the first facility in Australia built with all three “Grand Slam” surfaces in one location.

That variety is part of what makes the site useful for both tournament play and broader tennis activity across different court types.

The Brisbane International: Tennyson’s annual spotlight

Every year, Brisbane’s tennis calendar effectively begins here.

The Brisbane International, founded in 2009, is staged each January at the Queensland Tennis Centre as part of the summer lead-in to the Australian Open. It features a WTA 500 event and an ATP Tour 250 tournament, making it a key warm-up stop in the early-season calendar.

For 2026, the Brisbane International ran from 4–11 January 2026 at QTC.

That’s the modern rhythm of Tennyson: quiet suburb most months; international sporting address in early January.

More than a single stadium

Stadiums Queensland describes QTC as a venue that functions as a hub for tennis enthusiasts “of all levels,” not only for elite events.

Rather than being built around a single arena alone, QTC brings together centre-court events, extensive match and practice courts, and Tennis Queensland administration on the same riverfront site.

It’s a modern model for a sporting venue, designed to host major-tournament crowds while remaining an active tennis precinct outside the main event weeks.

There’s a bigger Brisbane story inside this redevelopment as well. The former power station site wasn’t simply replaced by a tennis venue; it became part of a renewed riverfront precinct anchored by the Queensland Tennis Centre.

It’s hard to imagine a more symbolic contrast than a former power station site becoming the stage for professional sport — where the energy is measured in applause, not megawatts.

Why Tennyson matters to Brisbane’s tennis identity

Tennyson’s tennis story isn’t only about where matches are played. It’s about how Brisbane chose to build its modern home for international-standard tennis.

QTC opened in the late 2000s as a newly constructed venue, with Pat Rafter Arena as its centrepiece. Since then, the Brisbane International has helped cement the suburb’s role as a major lead-in event to the Australian Open season.

In that way, Tennyson has become a modern sporting landmark, not through gradual evolution, but through purposeful reinvention.

And each January, as the first serves land on the hard courts at the Queensland Tennis Centre, the suburb briefly becomes one of Brisbane’s most visible stages for summer sport.



Published 15-Jan-2026

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