Toronto

Skaters return to Toronto Harbourfront Centre as rink reopens

In January 2023, the rink looked like it had closed for good after repair costs grew too high. But on Saturday, with new government funding, the scenic rink on Toronto's waterfront officially reopened.

Public outdoor rink reopened Saturday, nearly 2 years after it looked like it had closed permanently

Half a dozen skaters skate on an outdoor rink in downtown Toronto on a snowy, sunny day. There are condos in the background.
Skaters took to the ice at Toronto's Harbourfront Centre Saturday for the first time in nearly 2 years. (CBC)

Nearly two years after costly repair bills forced it to close, one of Toronto's most scenic outdoor skating rinks has reopened to the public.

The Harbourfront Centre rink, located on the shore of Lake Ontario, is officially opening for the winter on Saturday night, with free hot chocolate and skate rentals. 

Admission is free through the winter and the centre will continue to offer free skate rentals on Saturday nights. 

The rink closed in early 2023 after the Harbourfront Centre board said it wouldn't provide the millions of dollars needed for repairs. The centre had planned to turn the rink into a plaza, but that never materialized.

Then, this year, the federal government announced that it would provide $10 million over two years to support the Harbourfront Centre. A few months later, City Hall moved quickly to offer more money to reopen the rink for the winter season.

In October, Deputy-Mayor Ausma Malik, who also represents Spadina-Fort York, successfully moved to use money the city collects from two nearby developments to install a new skating rink on the harbourfront. That amounted to a one-time payment of $425,000, according to the motion.

"I heard the outcry from the community about how important the skating rink is," Malik said in an interview Saturday. 

"It's a treasured place on our waterfront," she said, adding that she'd been skating on the rink all her life and was now passing that tradition on to her family.

The Harbourfront Centre will have to secure funding from donors and sponsors to keep the rink open for future seasons, Malik said.

Harbourfront Centre CEO Cathy Loblaw says the centre is optimistic it will be able to keep skating going now that the city has made it possible to purchase the new rink. She says it's an imortant part of making the centre a year-round attraction.

"It's the heartbeat of the waterfront," she said Saturday. "And [we] are excited to bring back something that is so cherished and so loved in the community."

New rink good for local businesses, says BIA director

The Waterfront Business Improvement Area is helping cover the cost of free skate rentals every Saturday night this winter.

BIA executive director Tim Kocur says having a third free, outdoor rink on the city's waterfront — after the Bentway and Sherbourne Common — helps out local businesses during the slow, winter season.

"Having skating rinks is the best possible thing, 'cause I think there's certain days when it's going to be very difficult to get people out … depending on the weather," Kocur said.

On a sunny, winter day with snow on the ground, a white, middle aged man in glasses and black winter coat speaks into a CBC microphone outside an outdoor rink where skaters are skating
The new Harbourfront Centre rink will help bring foot traffic to businesses in the area during the slow, winter months, says Waterfront BIA executive director Tim Kocur. (CBC)

When waterfront rinks at the Bentway or Sherbourne Common are full, Kocur said, local businesses tell him they notice more customers coming in, even in the winter weather.

Although skaters have already been out on the new Harbourfront Centre rink, opening ceremonies officially begin at 7 p.m., led by DJ Kimiwan, a local Indigenous DJ and hoop dancer.

The Harbourfront Centre will continue to have DJ'd skates throughout the winter. 

The centre is also currently hosting Winterfest Toronto, a holiday market with a variety of vendors that runs until Jan. 5.

With files from Prasanjeet Choudhury