The oval has a current capacity of 15,000 and the entire spectator area on the western or Brighton Road side of the ground is concrete terracing. This is also where the former 500-seat
HY Sparkes Stand and the 1,000-seat
Edward Rix Stand, as well as the Glenelg Cricket Club, are located. The Glenelg Football Club offices, bars and function rooms are located under the Rix Stand. The entire outer side of the ground, which extends from goal to goal, consists only of grass banking which is less than five-metres wide on the outer wing. The area in front of the southern end of the Rix Stand is also where the Glenelg cheer squad stands for games, near the female and opposition change rooms and current home-team players race. This is the former location of the Snouts Bar, now situated near the new electronic scoreboard located where the old scoreboard stood. At only 160m x 115m, Glenelg Oval is among the smallest playing surfaces in the SANFL. The ground record attendance was set on 20 July 1968 when 17,171 saw
Sturt defeat Glenelg by just one point, 13.13 (91) to 13.12 (90). Glenelg Oval saw the highest score kicked by any team in SANFL history when Glenelg defeated
Central District 49.23 (317) to 11.13 (79) in round 18 of the 1975 SANFL season. The 228-point winning margin was an SANFL record at the time. Tigers champion
full-forward D.K. "Fred" Phillis, a
Magarey Medal winner for the Bays in 1969, kicked a Glenelg club record 18 goals in the match. Other stars for Glenelg on that famous day included
Graham Cornes,
Peter Carey,
Peter Marker and John McFarlane. Late in the last quarter, McFarlane, who had kicked almost 10 goals for the game, had a shot on goal that would have been the Tigers 50th. The ball hit the post though and was recorded as a point (in Australian football, if a kicked ball hits the goal posts, even if it then bounces through the goals untouched by any player or bounces back into play, the ball is dead and a point is awarded to the attacking team). In 2009, the oval was renamed to
Gliderol Stadium @ Glenelg as part of a sponsorship arrangement between the football club and its major sponsor, Gliderol Garage Doors. Previously, the ground was named
Challenge Recruitment Oval under sponsorship with employment agency Challenge Recruitment. On 28 December 2016,
Adelaide was hit by wild storms with heavy rain and high winds. The winds caused damage to Glenelg Oval with the roof of the HY Sparkes Stand blown off into the oval's car park. On 1 November 2018, Glenelg Oval was renamed
ACH Group Stadium as part of a partnership between the football club and co-tenant ACH Group. In November 2022, the oval was renamed
Stratarama Stadium as part of a new sponsorship deal for the 2023 season and beyond. Glenelg Oval hosted the highest ever partnership in
Sheffield Shield cricket on 1 November 2020, with Victorian openers
Will Pucovski and
Marcus Harris combining for 486 runs for the first-wicket stand in a match between
South Australia and
Victoria. ==Lights==