Ice rink

An ice rink (or ice skating rink) is a frozen body of water and/or hardened chemicals where people can skate or play winter sports. Besides recreational ice skating, some of its uses include ice hockey, figure skating and curling as well as exhibitions, contests and ice shows. There are two types of rinks in prevalent use today: natural, where freezing occurs due to cold ambient temperatures, and artificial (or mechanically-frozen), where a coolant produces cold temperatures in the surface below the water, causing the water to freeze. There are also synthetic ice rinks, where skating surfaces are made out of plastics.

Name origins

Rink, a Scottish word meaning 'course', was used as the name of a place where curling, was played. The name has been retained for the construction of ice areas for other sports and uses.[1]

Natural ice rink

Many ice rinks consist of, or are found on, open bodies of water such as lakes, ponds, canals, and sometimes rivers; these can only be used in the winter in climates where the surface would freeze thickly enough to support human weight. Rinks can also be made in cold climates by enclosing a level area of ground, filling it with water, and letting it freeze. Snow may even be packed to use as a containment material.

A famous example of this type of rink is the Rideau Canal Skateway in Ottawa, Canada, estimated at 1,764,000 square feet (163,900 m2) and 7.8 kilometres (4.8 mi) long,[2] which claims to be the "world's largest ice skating rink."[3] The rink is prepared by lowering the canal's water level, letting the canal water freeze due to the low winter temperatures. The rink is then resurfaced nightly by cleaning the ice of snow and flooding it with water from below the ice. The rink is recognized as the "world's largest naturally frozen ice surface" by the Guinness Book of World Records.[4]

Another famous rink is the annual River Trail rink cleared on the Red River at Winnipeg, Canada, which claims to be the "world's longest ice skating rink."[4] The Trail is cleared by volunteers with snow shovels and is 8.5 kilometres (5.3 mi) long.[4]

Artificial ice rink

In any climate, an arena ice surface can be installed in a properly built space. This consists of a bed of sand, or occasionally a slab of concrete, through (or on top of) which pipes run. The pipes carry a chilled fluid (usually either a salt brine or water with antifreeze, or in the case of smaller rinks, refrigerant) which can lower the temperature of the slab so that water placed atop it will freeze. Such rinks were developed in the late nineteenth century, the first being the Glaciarium in London.[5] This methodology is known as 'artificial ice' to differentiate from ice rinks made by simply freezing water in a cold climate, indoors or outdoors, although both types are of frozen water. A more proper technical term is 'mechanically frozen' ice.

A famous example of this type of rink is the Guidant John Rose Minnesota Oval, a 100,000 square feet (9,300 m2) rink in Roseville, Minnesota, United States. It is claimed to be the "largest artificial outdoor skating surface" in North America. Another example is the outdoor rink at Rockefeller Center in New York.

Construction

Modern rinks have a specific procedure for preparing the surface:

Synthetic rink

Synthetic rinks are constructed from a solid polymer material designed for skating using normal metal-bladed ice skates. High density polyethelene (HDPE) and ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMW) are the only materials that offer reasonable skating characteristics, with UHMW synthetic rinks offering the most ice-like skating, but also being the most expensive. A typical synthetic rink will consist of many panels (usually in typical building material sheet sizes) of thin surface material assembled on top of a sturdy, level and smooth sub-floor (anything from concrete to wood or even dirt or grass) to create a large skating area.

Operation

Periodically after the ice has been used, it is resurfaced using a machine called an ice resurfacer (sometimes colloquially referred to as a Zamboni). For curling, the surface is 'pebbled' by allowing loose drops of cold water to fall onto the ice and freeze into rounded peaks.

Between events, especially if the arena is being used without need for the ice surface, it is either covered with a heavily insulated floor, or melted by heating the fluid in the pipes.

A highly specialized form of rink is used for speed skating; this is a large oval (or ring) much like an athletic track. Due to their limited use, speed skating ovals are found in much fewer numbers than is true of the more common hockey or curling rinks.

Those skilled at preparing arena ice are often in demand for major events where ice quality is critical. The level of the sport of hockey in Canada has led its icemakers to be particularly sought-after. One such team of professionals was responsible for placing a loonie coin under center ice at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Utah; as both Canadian teams (men's and women's) won their respective hockey gold medals, the coin was christened "lucky" and is now in the possession of the Hockey Hall of Fame,[6] after having been retrieved from beneath the ice.

Backyard Ice Rinks

Backyard ice rinks can be built on relatively level ground in colder climates. If the ground is deeply frozen and poorly drained and the temperatures are quite cold, the snow can be plowed away from an area and the area simply flooded with water. If the ground is well-drained and/or not deeply frozen the water may simply run into the ground. Better results are obtained by impounding a pond of water using 2x4 or 2x6 boards and a poly liner. The boards are held on edge, on the outside of the rink, with heavy duty steel garden stakes sawn down to 18" lengths and deck screws. Use two stakes per board. Although clear and black poly is widely available, white poly is sold by greenhouse supply companies and looks better. Drape it over the top of the boards. To protect the edges of the liner from skates and snow shovels, add a second course of 2x4 boards, on edge, with a second set of steel stakes. On the rink side of this course of 2x4's fasten parallel 2x6's that will hang down into the water (soon to be ice) and cover the exposed liner. The boards should be fastened together, end to end and at the corners with steel mending plates found in home improvement stores. The whole assembly can be disassembled in spring and stored for use the next winter. The poly liner may last up to five seasons before it will need to be replaced. This sort of rink does not damage lawns.

Standard rink sizes

Speedskating

In speedskating, the official Olympic rink size is 30 x 60 meters for short track, and 400 meters for long track.

Bandy

In bandy, the rink size is 90–110 m (300–360 ft) x 45–65 m (148–213 ft).

Ice Hockey

There are basically two rink sizes in use (as below), although there is a great deal of variations in the dimensions of actual ice rinks. Historically, earlier ice rinks were smaller than today.

National Hockey League (NHL) - Canada & USA

Official NHL rinks size at 85 × 200 ft (26 × 61 m). The dimensions originate from the size of the Victoria Skating Rink in Montreal, Canada.

International/Olympic Ice Hockey

Official Olympic/International rinks have dimensions of 30 × 61 m (98 × 200 ft). The 2010 Olympic Winter Games in Vancouver, however, were played on an NHL sized 85 x 200 ft ice sheet as GM Place -renamed 'Canada Hockey Place' for the games- is an NHL venue for the Vancouver Canucks.

See also

An Olympic Rink is 210.13 ft X , 30 meters X 61 meters - An NHL Rink is 200 ft X 85ft , 60.96 meters X 25.91 meters.

Gallery

References

  1. ^ Redmond, Gerald (1982). The sporting Scots of nineteenth-century Canada. Toronto, Ontario: Associated University Presses Inc.. p. 271. ISBN 0838630693. 
  2. ^ "Guinness World Records has confirmed it! Ottawa, Canada offers the Largest Skating Rink in the World". canadacool.com. http://www.canadacool.com/COOLFACTS/ONTARIO/OttawaSkate.html. Retrieved June 24, 2010. 
  3. ^ "Rideau Canal Skateway". National Capital Commission. http://www.canadascapital.gc.ca/bins/ncc_web_content_page.asp?cid=16297-16299-10080&lang=1. Retrieved June 24, 2010. 
  4. ^ a b c "World's longest skating rink". canada.com. http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/news/story.html?id=82e36af4-c290-41c0-97e1-17db86842375. Retrieved June 24, 2010. 
  5. ^ Martin C. Harris, Homes of British Ice Hockey
  6. ^ http://www.hhof.com/html/olypress.shtml
  7. ^ [1] Advanced Ice Technology by WWIP

External links