- National Ice Centre
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This article is about the ice hockey arena in England. For the United States government center, see National Ice Center.
The National Ice Centre (NIC) is located in Nottingham, England. Just east of the city centre, it is close to the historic Lace Market area. The facility neighbours the Capital FM Arena Nottingham.
The site has hosted an ice arena since 1939, but the old building was showing its age: hence its nickname, "The Barn". Several buildings were demolished to make way for the new arena, including an Art Deco warehouse on the opposite side of Barker Gate, and bodies had to be exhumed from a nineteenth century graveyard found under the car park. This obviously led to some controversy at the time, but The Old Cricket Players pub was initially spared. It was eventually pulled down to make way for an apartment block called the "Ice House". The Ice Stadium closed in April 2000 and was demolished soon after to make way for the building of the second public rink.
The current building was first announced in September 1995 at an estimated cost of £13 million - part of which was to come from National Lottery funds. The plans were unveiled in October 1996, by which time the British Olympic Association had got behind the proposal. The first public skating session took place in April 2000. The final cost of the project was around £40m, 10% of which came from the lottery - one of the highest grants awarded.
The arena is home to the Nottingham Panthers ice hockey team, founded in 1946 (although disbanded in 1960 and reformed 20 years later). The earlier building was the training ground for Olympic ice dancing champions Torvill and Dean (Jayne Torvill & Christopher Dean), who led the first public skating session in the new building. The square in front of the building was re-named 'Bolero Square' to honour their great achievements. There are two ice pads. The capacity of the main arena is 10,000. The NIC is also a Wi-Fi hotspot using the BT Openzone network.
A rare 1,100 year old Saxon jug was turned up during excavations in July 1998. It was put on display at the Nottingham Castle Museum.
Nottingham Arena and was renamed the Trent FM Arena on first April 2008, as part of a four year naming rights for the local radio station.[1] The Arena is still managed by Nottingham Ice Centre Ltd.
The arena was again re-branded in 2011, becoming the 'Capital FM Arena Nottingham' in order to coincide with the nationwide launch of Capital FM.
References
External links
- Capital FM Arena Nottingham
- National Ice Centre
- A virtual tour of the ice rink, courtesy of the BBC's Nottingham Panthers page
Coordinates: 52°57′10″N 1°8′22″W / 52.95278°N 1.13944°W
Indoor arenas in the United Kingdom by capacity Manchester Evening News Arena (21,000) · The O2 Arena (20,000) · Earls Court Exhibition Centre (19,000) · LG Arena (16,000) · Odyssey Arena (14,000) · Motorpoint Arena Sheffield (13,500) · National Indoor Arena (13,000) · Manchester Central (12,500) · SECC (12,500) · Wembley Arena (12,500) · Echo Arena Liverpool (11,000) · Metro Radio Arena (11,000) · Capital FM Arena Nottingham (10,000) · AECC (10,000) · Motorpoint Arena Cardiff (7,500)Main venues Braehead Arena · Cardiff Arena · Dundee Ice Arena · Fife Ice Arena · Hull Arena · Murrayfield Ice Rink (Edinburgh) · National Ice Centre (Nottingham) · Odyssey Arena (Belfast) · Motorpoint Arena (Sheffield) · SkyDome Arena (Coventry) ·Secondary venues Former venues Alexandra Palace · Altrincham Ice Dome (Manchester) · Deeside Leisure Centre · Lee Valley Ice Centre · MEN Arena · · Metro Radio Arena (Newcastle 2005-10) Planet Ice Silverdome (Basingstoke) · Wales National Ice Rink · Whitley Bay Ice Rink (Newcastle 2010-11) ·Categories:- Sport in Nottingham
- Indoor ice hockey venues in England
- Indoor arenas in England
- Music in Nottinghamshire
- Exhibition and conference centres in England
- Nottingham Panthers
- Sports venues in Nottinghamshire
- Premier League Darts venues
- Visitor attractions in Nottingham
- Buildings and structures in Nottingham
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