[1] A more central location was sought, and in August 1959 IFK acquired a lease for 2.4 hectares (5.9 acres) of land near Delsjön.
[1][2] The 220 square metres (2,400 sq ft) building complex was officially opened on 1 October 1961, and expanded in 1964 with a large storehouse.
[3] A second grass pitch was added in 1994, and a year later an indoor hall (without heating) for seven-a-side football and training was completed some 500 metres from the main buildings.
[8] Due to weak finances, IFK Göteborg decided to sell Kamratgården to an external partner in late 2015.
The agreement released funds needed to secure the economy, while at the same time allowing IFK to rent the facilities without increased operating costs.
[10] The members of the club decided to buy back Kamratgården at an extraordinary general meeting in late November 2021, the buyback being officially completed on 1 December 2021 to a cost of around SEK 46 million, mainly financed by loans.
[11] IFK Göteborg was the first elite team in Sweden to install hybrid grass, with one of the two pitches at Kamratgården changed to the new surface during the winter of 2016/2017.