Twelve months on since he first took over as coach in the middle of a financial crisis, Aloisi has again urged his players to keep their mind on the job.

"What happens in the background or the office or upstairs, the players need to make sure they come prepared to train and improve. There's no real disruption with us," Aloisi told reporters on Monday.

Roar trained at Griffith University on Monday in their first session together ahead of the 2016-2017 campaign.

Aloisi confirmed Roar will return to their old headquarters, Ballymore, in the coming weeks as prospective owner Daniel Cobb completes the purchase of the club from the Bakrie Group.

On Aloisi's first day in the job last year, Roar were evicted from Ballymore due to unpaid rent and were later taken to court by the Queensland Rugby Union.

But the arrival of Cobb and his consortium appears to have changed the dynamics in Brisbane.

Nothing is certain until the sale is officially ratified by Football Federation Australia, but Aloisi said he was so far pleased with the club's new bosses.

Midfield signing Jacob Pepper was the only new face at training, but Roar are still in the market for further reinforcements in attack and in the middle of the park.

However, don't expect either of Brisbane's two vacant import spots to be filled anytime soon.

"We didn't get Corona in until two weeks before the start of the season, and he won our best player (award)," Aloisi said.

"We know sometimes it might take a little bit longer. Things move, things happen during an off-season that you can't control, but you can't panic."

Luke DeVere was also fully involved and is expected to play a huge part in Brisbane's season, putting paid to recent reports he was considering retirement due to recurring injuries.