Former names | Kettler Capitals Iceplex Ballston Ice Arena (name during planning and construction) |
---|---|
Location | Ballston, Virginia, U.S. |
Public transit | Washington Metro at Ballston–MU station |
Owner | Monumental Sports & Entertainment |
Capacity | 1,200 |
Surface | 200' x 85' (Rinks 1 and 2) |
Construction | |
Opened | November 2006 |
Construction cost | $42.8 million |
Architect | William R. Drury |
Tenants | |
Washington Capitals (NHL, practice facility) Washington Jr. Nationals (AJHL) (2007–2010) Georgetown Hoyas (ACHA) George Washington Colonials (ACHA) NOVA Cool Cats special hockey team DC Sled Sharks |
MedStar Capitals Iceplex is the practice arena of the Washington Capitals of the National Hockey League. The highest ice rink above street-level in the United States, it is located on the eighth floor atop the parking garage adjoining the Ballston Quarter in the Ballston neighborhood of Arlington County, Virginia. [1]
Opened in 2006, the 137,000-square-foot (12,700 m2) facility, which is owned by Capitals owning entity Monumental Sports & Entertainment, houses two full-NHL-sized ice rinks with seating for 1,200, a training center, a proshop, and offices for staff of both the Capitals and the WNBA's Washington Mystics.
The Capitals spend about 300 hours annually practicing at the arena, which has 12,000 hours of ice time available annually. The Iceplex also serves as the home ice for the club teams of Georgetown University and George Washington University. The Iceplex also runs an adult league for amateur hockey players. It is regularly available for recreational use, and hosts "Learn to Skate" camps and lessons throughout the year. [1] [2]
The Iceplex is also home to the NOVA Cool Cats special hockey team, which practices and has home games at the IcePlex, and the DC Sled Sharks, a sledge hockey team for physically disabled youths 18 and under, which plays in the Delaware Valley Sled Hockey League. [3] [4]
The Iceplex served as the initial inspiration for the building of LECOM Harborcenter in Buffalo, New York by the Buffalo Sabres and Terrence Pegula. LECOM Harborcenter serves a similar purpose to the IcePlex. [5]
The Washington Capitals had long practiced at a rink in Piney Orchard, Maryland, near the Capital Centre, even after the team moved to downtown Washington, D.C., in 1997. Arlington County, Virginia, had purchased the parking garage at the Parkington Shopping Center in 1984 as part of an economic development plan in the Ballston area. The facility was subsequently renamed the Ballston Public Parking Garage, and the original 1950s structure was renovated and expanded to provide 2,800 parking spaces on seven floors. This expansion was financed with $22.3 million in variable rate revenue bond. Ted Leonsis, who bought the Capitals in 1999, began looking to build a new practice facility and in 2004, the team secured agreements with Arlington County to build a new rink on top of the Ballston Public Parking Garage.
The building was designed by William R. Drury of the Reston, Virginia–based firm, Architecture, Incorporated, and completed in November 2006 at a cost of $42.8 million. [1] It is built to LEED standards, though was not registered with the Green Building Council to receive a certification. It is not fully handicapped accessible. [6] The facility totals 137,000 square-feet and includes two indoor NHL-sized ice rinks, office space, 8 player locker rooms, a full-service ProShop, a Capitals Team Store, a snack bar, and spaces for special events. In addition, it includes a 20,000 square foot training center for the Capitals, containing an athletic-training and medical facilities, a weight room and fitness room, a locker room and lounge area, a high-tech theatre-style classroom and a video room. [7] An additional level, above the training facility, houses office space for the entire front-office staff of the Capitals and the WNBA’s Washington Mystics.
Originally named Ballston Ice Arena, it was renamed Kettler Capitals Iceplex by Washington metropolitan area real estate developer Robert C. Kettler. [8] His firm, KSI Services, bought the naming rights to the arena on November 1, 2006, for seven years at $400,000 per year. The arena opened with its first practice 10 days later. [9] In 2010, the Arlington County Board recognized the facility in the inaugural DESIGNArlington awards. [10] The facility continued to bear Kettler's name until weeks after the Capitals won their first Stanley Cup in 2018, when MedStar Health bought the naming rights in a 10-year agreement together with the other Monumental Sports & Entertainment practice facilities. [11]
The Washington Capitals are a professional ice hockey team based in Washington, D.C. The Capitals compete in the National Hockey League (NHL) as a member of the Metropolitan Division in the Eastern Conference and is owned by Ted Leonsis through Monumental Sports & Entertainment. The team initially played its home games at the Capital Centre in Landover, Maryland, before moving to the Capital One Arena in Washington, D.C., in 1997.
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Ballston is a neighborhood in Arlington County, Virginia. Ballston is located at the western end of the Rosslyn-Ballston corridor. It is a major transportation hub and has one of the nation's highest concentrations of scientific research institutes and research and development agencies, including DARPA, the Office of Naval Research, the Advanced Research Institute of Virginia Tech, the Air Force Research Laboratory, and engineering, management, and public sector consulting firms. Ballston also includes a section known as Virginia Square and sometimes the area is collectively known as Ballston-Virginia Square.
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Robert Charles Kettler is an American real estate developer and founder of the Washington D.C. area development company Kettler.
Ballston Quarter, formerly known as Ballston Common Mall, originally opened as Parkington Shopping Center, is one of the first major suburban shopping centers in the Washington metropolitan area. It opened in 1951 and was the nation's first shopping center built around a multi-story parking garage. It is located at the intersection of Glebe Road and Wilson Boulevard in the Ballston neighborhood of Arlington County, Virginia, two blocks from Ballston–MU station on the Washington Metro's Orange and Silver lines.
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Benson led a group of Sabres officials to Washington, DC to view the Capitals practice facility, which is built on top of a parking garage, and form their idea.