Speed skating rink explained

A speed skating rink (or speed skating oval) is an ice rink in which a speed skating competition is held.

The rink

A standard long track speed skating track is, according to the regulations of the International Skating Union (ISU), a double-laned track with two curved ends each of 180°, in which the radius of the inner curve is not less than 25 metres and not more than 26 metres. The width of the competition lanes is 4 metres. At the opposite straight of the finishing line, there is a crossing area, where the skaters must change lane.[1]

At international competitions, the track must be 400 metres long, with a warm-up lane at least 4 metres wide inside the competition lanes.[2] For Olympic competitions, the track must also be enclosed within a building.[3]

The design and dimensions of a speed skating track have remained more or less unchanged since the foundation of ISU in 1892.

The speed skating track is also used for the sports of Icetrack cycling and Ice speedway

Measurement and demarcation

The measurement of the track is made half a meter into the lane.[4] The total length of the track is the distance a competitor skates each lap, i.e. the length of two straights, one inner curve and one outer curve, in addition to the extra distance skated when changing lanes in the cross-over area, which on a standard track equals 7 centimeters.

The demarcation of the competition lanes are made by painted lines in the ice (or a set of painted marks) and movable blocks of rubber. On outdoor tracks, snow may also be used for demarcation of the competition lanes.[5]

Alternative speed skating tracks

Although ISU regulations state that minimum measures for a standard speed skating track, alternative track lengths may be used for competition. The minimum requirements are track length on 200 meters, radius of inner curve of 15  meters and width of the competition lanes 2 meters.[6]

Short track speed skating tracks have a length of 111.111 metres (364.54 ft). The rink is 60 metres (200 ft) long by 30 metres (98 ft) wide, which is the same size as an international-sized ice hockey rink.

Combination with other sports

Many speed skating venues have ice hockey rinks or no ice area at all inside the oval. A few are suitable also for bandy, like Hamar Olympic Hall,[7] Ice Palace Krylatskoye,[8] and Medeu.[9] The Beijing National Speed Skating Oval in Beijing, China, which is in the process of being built for the 2022 Winter Olympics, is also designed appropriately for that sport.[10] [11] There is a growing cooperation between International Skating Union and Federation of International Bandy, since both have an interest in more indoor venues with large ice surfaces being built.[12] In Norway there is an agreement in place, stating that an indoor arena intended primarily for either bandy or long track speed skating, shall have ice surface for the other sport as well.

Indoor speed skating tracks

See main article: List of indoor speed skating rinks. Below is a complete list of the indoor 400 m speed skating tracks around the world. The data presented are retrieved from the online database Speed Skating News.[13]

Country City Track name Elevation (m) Finished
Belarus209 2010
Canada1105 1987
CanadaPomeroy Sport Centre671 2009
Canada4 2008*
ChinaJilin Provincial Speed Skating Rink 210 2005
China Daqing Stadium 149 2005
China141 1995
ChinaIndoor Icerink 146 2007
ChinaBayi Speed Skating Oval 48 1999
China Xinjiang Ice Sport Centre 1710 2015
Germany34 1985
GermanyGunda Niemann-Stirnemann Halle 214 2001
Germany690 2011
Italy233 2005
Japan346 1996
JapanMeiji Hokkaido-Tokachi Oval 79 2009
Kazakhstan348 2011
NetherlandsKunstijsbaan Breda 5 2001
NetherlandsLeisure World Ice Center -3 1998
NetherlandsIJsbaan Twente 27 2008
NetherlandsKardinge 0 1993
Netherlands0 1986
Netherlands De Westfries 0 2006
NetherlandsIreen Wüst IJsbaan 13 2009
NetherlandsElfstedenhal 0 2015
Norway8 2007
Norway125 1992
Norway48 2010
Poland1532017
RussiaUralskaya Molniya 222 2005
RussiaSpeed Skating Centre 120 2006
Russia127 2004
Russia5 2012
RussiaIrkutskIce Palace Baikal4202020
RussiaKemerovoIce Palace Kuzbass2021
South Korea26 2015
South KoreaTaereung Indoor Ice Rink 63 2000
SwedenRudhallen 40 2002
USA216 1993
USA1423 2000

Other major speed skating tracks

In the table below, some of the world's major outdoor speed skating tracks still in use are listed. This is not a complete list of speed skating venues, but lists most of the outdoor tracks used for world cup competitions and championships the past years. The data in the table are retrieved from the Speed Skating News database.

Country City Track name Altitude (meters) Finished Other
Austria Olympia Eisstadion 586 1963 Winter Olympics 1964 and 1976
Canada30 2011
CanadaAnneau Gaétan-Boucher 103 1972 Artificial ice in 1985, now closed, converted to an indoor oval. The building complex is now as know the « Centre de Glaces » for autumn 2021. This oval is now covered and should be on the indoor list as of Fall(?) 2022. The name of the 400 m ice track hasn't changed.
CanadaSaskatoonClarence Downey Oval4851947Natural ice
CanadaSusan Auch Oval 234 1979 Natural ice
Finland Oulunkylän Liikuntapuisto 39 1977
Finland Jääurheilukeskus 44 1952
Hungary Városligeti Műjégpálya 115 1968
Italy 998 1985 Winter Olympics 2026, to expand for indoor configuration.
Italy Arena Ritten 1173 1989
Kazakhstan1691 1951 Artificial ice in 1972, Included in the defeated bid for 2014 and 2022 Winter Olympics in Almaty.
Netherlands Jaap Eden IJsbaan -5 1961
Netherlands De Scheg 6 1992 Semi-covered
NetherlandsDe Uithof 0 1989 Semi-covered
Netherlands 0 1977 Semi-covered
Netherlands -2 1970 Semi-covered
Norway 42 1914 Artificial ice in 2010
Norway 92 1966 Included in the cancelled bid for 2022 Winter Olympics in Oslo and Lillehammer.
Poland Tor Stegny 82 1979
Poland 932 1956 Included in the cancelled bid for 2022 Winter Olympics in Krakow.
Switzerland 1560 1894 Natural ice, Included in the cancelled bid for 2022 Winter Olympics in Kanton of Graubünden.
USA 568 1977 Winter Olympics 1980, Winter Universiade 2023.
USA 276 1993 Refrigerated Ice

See also

Notes and References

  1. ISU Special Regulations and Technical Rules
  2. ISU Special Regulations and Technical Rules - Rule 205
  3. ISU Special Regulations and Technical Rules - Rule 206
  4. ISU Special Regulations and Technical Rules - Rule 228
  5. ISU Special Regulations and Technical Rules - Rule 226
  6. ISU Special Regulations and Technical Rules - Rule 204
  7. http://arkiv.bandyforbundet.no/bandy/bilder/bandytrening.jpg bandyforbundet.no
  8. http://cdn1.img.rsport.ru/images/90185/92/901859281.jpg image at rsport.ru
  9. https://web.archive.org/web/20160306064734if_/http://www.on.kz/userdata/10152/blogpost_photos/3246678c82a4e2a4fa3ce90a304d4ac8.JPG image at on.kz, via Wayback Machine
  10. http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2017-04/27/content_29104802.htm Beijing unveils design of speed skating venue for Olympics
  11. Web site: Сайт любителей русского хоккея — www.kuzbassbandyclub.ru .
  12. https://translate.google.co.uk/translate?hl=en&sl=ru&u=http://www.kuzbassbandyclub.ru/mainnews/archive/3698 kuzbassbandyclub.ru
  13. http://www.speedskatingnews.info Speed Skating News