Tender now open to manage Casey’s leisure facilities

The City of Casey is encouraging suitable businesses to apply to manage and operate seven of the City’s leisure facilities, which have a combined annual visitation of approximately 3 million people.

This is by far the largest management contract in Casey’s history and one of the biggest leisure management contracts in Australia.

Council announced last year its plans to streamline the management and operation of its leisure facilities to maximise health and wellbeing opportunities for the Casey community.

The decision followed a comprehensive review of its facilities, which are currently managed by three separate partners across four separate contracts or service agreements, leading to operational inefficiencies.

City of Casey Chief Executive Officer, Glenn Patterson said as part of the review, various management models were assessed, however it was determined that a single aligned contract, with the option to separately manage Olive Road Sporting Complex and The Shed, would deliver the highest benefit.

“Thousands of people visit Council’s leisure facilities every day and increasingly, our venues are also being chosen to host national and international events. Having a number of different management contracts, with a number of different providers, is not efficient for Council and means the experience for users of those facilities is not always consistent,” Mr Patterson said.

“Our leisure facilities are highly valued by the community and play a vital role in improving the overall physical, social and mental wellbeing of our residents and visitors.”

The seven centres that will be included in the contract are Casey ARC, Casey RACE, Doveton Pool in the Park, Casey Stadium, Endeavour Hills Leisure Centre, Olive Road Sporting Complex and The Shed Skatepark. Combined, these facilities have an annual turnover of approximately $20 million.

A request for tender process commenced on Saturday 5 August and includes multiple options for the market to respond to. This will enable Council to compare and review different approaches to management and operations of each centre and assess responses on a like-for-like basis.

It is expected that the new contract will begin from 1 July 2024.

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