For more than half a century, one question could start an argument in any Australian garage, pub or family kitchen: Holden or Ford? It wasn't just about cars. It was about loyalty, identity, and which badge you'd defend to the end.
The rivalry caught fire in the 1960s, when both manufacturers realised that winning on the racetrack meant winning in the showroom. Holden had the heartland behind it — the people's car, the Aussie battler's choice. Ford answered with raw performance and a Falcon that refused to back down. Suddenly every Australian had a side.
More Than Metal
What made this rivalry so fierce is that it was inherited. You didn't choose Holden or Ford so much as you were born into it. Your dad's badge became your badge. Backyard arguments were passed down like family heirlooms, and the cars became symbols of something bigger than horsepower.
The Cars That Carried It
Behind every heated debate were genuine icons: Monaros and Toranas flying the Holden flag, Falcon GTs carrying the blue oval into battle. Those cars didn't just compete — they defined an entire era of Australian engineering and pride. And the best part? You can stand between both camps in a single afternoon.
See Both Camps Under One Roof
Holden and Ford legends, side by side, just minutes from Surfers Paradise.