ice-skating-hours-rates-banner.jpg

BUILDING THE RIBBON

BUILDING THE ICE RIBBON

Operations staff Corey & Will, and volunteer Frank, are excited to build the ice ribbon!

Operations staff Corey & Will, and volunteer Frank, are excited to build the ice ribbon!

Get ready to glide into winter on Idaho’s only, and the nation’s seventh, ice skating ribbon and ice rink!  What's an ice ribbon you ask? An ice pathway that winds around the Plaza and culminates in a rink!

Indian Creek Plaza staff will begin building the Ice Ribbon on October 26. It takes about three weeks until the glass dasher boards, ice, and rubber mats are fully installed. We plan to open the ice ribbon to the public for ice skating in the middle of November.

Step 1: Dasher Board Installation

Dasher boards are walls and hand rails that surround the Ice Ribbon to form its shape.

The dasher boards are about 6 feet wide pieces broken into a base, glass wall, and metal hand rail. Each base is custom made to match with the curves of the Ribbon. The bases are numbered so we know exactly where to place them on the Ribbon. Once the bases of the dasher boards are sorted and placed in their correct spot, they are secured to the concrete.

After securing the base of the dasher boards, the glass walls and metal hand rails are installed.

Dasher boards are walls and hand rails that surround the Ice Ribbon to form its shape.

The dasher boards are about 6 feet wide pieces broken into a base, glass wall, and metal hand rail. Each base is custom made to match with the curves of the Ribbon. The bases are numbered so we know exactly where to place them on the Ribbon. Once the bases of the dasher boards are sorted and placed in their correct spot, they are secured to the concrete.

After securing the base of the dasher boards, the glass walls and metal hand rails are installed.

step 2: Applying the sheet rock tape

The sheet rock tape is applied to the base of the dasher boards to prevent any water from leaking underneath the dasher boards.

tape.jpg

step 3: making the ice

Under the Ice Ribbon there are four miles of piping to cool the concrete. Water is sprayed across the concrete and ice is made one layer at a time until it is about two inches thick. In between layers, the ice is painted white to prevent it from melting.

IMG_1101.JPG
paint spraying.jpg