PEI

Residents nostalgic as Simmons Sports Centre hosts final Sunday skate

Islanders got a chance to take one last lap around the boards and grab one more order of rink fries at Simmons Sports Centre in Charlottetown on Sunday, which marked the final free skate at the arena.

The mainstay Charlottetown rink will eventually be torn down, making way for a brand-new facility next door

A group of people of all ages skating around an indoor ice rink
Sunday marked the final free skate at Charlottetown's Simmons Sports Centre, an arena that's built many memories over its 50 years of operation. (Stacey Janzer/CBC)

Islanders got a chance to take one last lap around the boards and grab one more order of rink fries at Simmons Sports Centre in Charlottetown this weekend. 

Sunday marked the final free skate at the arena before it's eventually torn down, making way for a brand-new sports centre that is slated to open this fall. 

Over the course of 50 years, the building has played host to plenty of memories for city residents of all ages. 

Sabrinna Spingle said all of her children learned to skate and play hockey at the arena, and it's also become a place for her to meet up with friends she's made through her kids' activities. 

A woman with shoulder length hair and a black winter coat standing along the boards of an ice rink
'It’s very much my social circle,' Sabrinna Spingle says of the Simmons Sports Centre. (Stacey Janzer/CBC)

"It's very much my social circle," she said.

"There's a lot of great atmosphere in here, everybody comes in here with great memories. My feet don't touch the floor when [I] sit in the stands. You're always cold, but that's part of it." 

The new $33-million replacement facility sits just next to the existing sports centre on North River Road. 

The new centre will include an NHL-sized ice surface with six dressing rooms, an outdoor swimming pool with three change rooms, a large multipurpose room, and a walking track on the second floor.

One last free skate at Simmons Sports Centre in Charlottetown

8 months ago
Duration 3:16
Families came for their last free skate at the Simmons Sports Centre in Charlottetown. The 50-year-old building will be closing April 1, with the new rink expected to open in the fall.

The building was initially expected to open last fall, but the project was delayed by the pandemic. Officials also blamed rising construction costs. 

It's now expected to open this October.

The final skate at the original Simmons on Sunday was bittersweet for many who attended, with a lifetime's worth of memories making way for a new facility that people are excited to use. 

"I pretty much grew up at this rink," said Jacob Muttart, 14. "I lived at the pool, and in the winter I lived here [at the rink]. I learned how to skate here. Pretty much had the best 14 years of my life playing hockey.

"The new rink, I bet it's going to be even better than this, so I'll just have to make new memories and finish off my hockey years at that rink."   

A group of people of all ages skate around an ice rink
Residents of all ages have many fond memories of skating at the mainstay Charlottetown rink. (Stacey Janzer/CBC)

Rodney Cudmore watched his grandson play hockey at Simmons Sports Centre for years and remembers his own early days of attending free skates on the ice surface. 

"I have a lot of memories from my own children and my grandchildren skating here," he said. "My first memory, the first time I was ever in the place, April Wine was playing and I was about 18 at the time."

The rink is nestled between Colonel Gray High School and Queen Charlotte Intermediate, making it the perfect place for students to skate or practise their hockey skills after school. 

Two young boys stand together with skates on inside an ice arena
Jacob Muttart, left, and Chase Munn, both 14, grew up at the Simmons rink learning how to skate and play hockey. (Stacey Janzer/CBC)

Chase Munn, 14, was happy he got to spend his hockey-playing days at Simmons over the years. 

"I grew up in the penalty box, mostly," he laughed. "It was a fun time and I love this rink. It's pretty cool [and] the fries are good here, too.

"It's good to give it a retirement. It served a long time."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Stephen Brun

Journalist

Stephen Brun works for CBC in Charlottetown, P.E.I. Through the years he has been a writer and editor for a number of newspapers and news sites across Canada, most recently in the Atlantic region. You can reach him at stephen.brun@cbc.ca.

With files from Stacey Janzer