Dundonald International Ice Bowl
54°35′13″N 5°49′05″W / 54.587°N 5.818°W / 54.587; -5.818
Address | Northern Ireland |
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Location | Dundonald, County Down |
Type | Ice rink |
Opened | 1986 |
The Dundonald International Ice Bowl is an ice rink in Dundonald, County Down, Northern Ireland. It was opened in 1986 by Peter Robinson.[1]
Tenants
Current tenants
- Ice Rink
- Alaska Sports Diner (2004–present)
- Xtreme Bowling (1990's-present)
- Indiana Land (Children's Mayan themed playzone, 1993–present)
- Battlefield Sports N.I. (Laser Combat and Airsoft Games, 2005–Present)
- Clip 'n' Climb (2012–present)
Former tenants
- Tenpin Bowling (1986-1990s)
- Blades Sports Bar (1986-2004)
- Choc-O-Bloc (Ice Cream, 2009–201?)
Outside tenants
- Urban Assault (1990–present)
- Pirate Adventure Golf (2004–present) Sometimes called Crazy Golf
Behind the Ice Bowl is the David Lloyd Fitness Centre, and across the road is the Hanwood Business Park and the Dundonald OmniPark (previously Eastpoint Leisure Village from 2009 to June 2015). Together, they all make up the Dundonald Leisure Park. There is planning permission for a hotel to be built next to the Ice Bowl and Fitness Centre since the early 2000s.
Pirates Adventure Golf
In 2004, a new golf course opened. It was built where the original main car park was.[2] It has two courses, Blackbeard's Adventure and The Captain's Challenge.[3] In the Winter, a giant cover goes over the Blackbeard's Adventure course so visitors don't get put off and the track stays dry.
Ice hockey
It is the training base and a secondary venue of the Belfast Giants ice hockey team.
During the 2008–09 Elite Ice Hockey League season, the venue hosted the second leg of the Challenge Cup final, which was won 3–1 by the Giants, giving them a 6–5 aggregate victory.
See also
References
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- Altrincham Ice Dome (Manchester)
- Braehead Arena (Glasgow)
- Dundee Ice Arena
- Fife Ice Arena (Kirkcaldy)
- Guildford Spectrum
- Ice Arena Wales (Cardiff)
- National Ice Centre (Nottingham)
- Sheffield Arena
- SkyDome Arena (Coventry)
- SSE Arena Belfast
- Dundonald International Ice Bowl
- IceSheffield
- Alexandra Palace (London 2003–04)
- Cardiff Arena (Cardiff 2006–16)
- Deeside Leisure Centre
- Hull Arena
- Lee Valley Ice Centre (London 2004–06)
- AO Arena
- Metro Radio Arena (Newcastle 2005–10)
- Murrayfield Ice Rink (Edinburgh)
- Planet Ice Arena Milton Keynes
- Planet Ice Silverdome (Basingstoke)
- Wales National Ice Rink (Cardiff 1986-2006)
- Whitley Bay Ice Rink (Newcastle 2010–11)
This article about a sports venue in Northern Ireland is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
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This article about a European ice hockey arena is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
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