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词条 Fort St. John Enerplex
释义

  1. History

  2. Facilities

  3. References

{{Infobox stadium
| name =
| nickname =
| image =
| fullname =
| location = 9324 – 96 Avenue
BC V1J 4
Fort St. John, British Columbia, Canada
| coordinates = {{coord|56.240|-120.841|type:landmark_region:CA-BC|display=title,inline}}
| broke_ground =
| built =
| opened = {{start date|13 October 2010}}
| renovated =
| expanded =
| closed =
| demolished =
| owner = City of Fort St. John
| operator =
| surface = Artificial ice
| construction_cost = $44 million
| architect =
| structural engineer =
| services engineer =
| general_contractor =
| project_manager =
| main_contractors =
| former_names =
| tenants =
| capacity = 1,000
| dimensions =
| scoreboard =
}}

Fort St. John Enerplex, also known for sponsorship reasons as Pomeroy Sport Centre, is a sports venue in the Canadian town of Fort St. John, British Columbia. The indoor arena features two ice hockey rinks, a long-track speed skating rink and a walkway. The venue was taking into use on 23 December 2009, and officially opened 13 October 2010.

History

Construction of the venue cost $44 million, of which $15 million was paid for by the provincial government. In addition to meeting local recreational needs, the venue was part of a provincial effort to provide for more elite sports efforts in the regional centres. In particular, the Peace River Regional District had been an important space for the development of several Canadian top speed skaters.[1]

The first use of the speed skating rink took place on 23 December 2009.[2] The venue was officially opened on 13 October 2010.[1] The city subsequently signed a fifteen year naming deal with the Pomeroy Group.[3][4]

Facilities

The venue covers a floor area of {{convert|13000|m2}}.[1] The ground floor features two North American-sized ice hockey rinks, with a combined spectator capacity of 1,000.[1] The second floor features a {{convert|400|m|adj=on}} long-track ice rink at an elevation of {{convert|671|m}} above mean sea level.[2] The upper deck features a {{convert|380|m|adj=on}} walkway. All ice surfaces are artificial.

[1]

The Enerplex is one of only two indoor long-track speed skating rinks in Canada, the other being the Olympic Oval in Calgary, and one of four in the Americas. It remains the sole such indoor venue in British Columbia after the Richmond Olympic Oval was converted to a general-purpose recreational centre after the conclusion of the 2010 Winter Olympics.[1]

The venue is built on a {{convert|3|ha|adj=on}} lot with 259 parking spaces on 96 Avenue. The lot features {{convert|1700|m2}} of pedestrian plazas and {{convert|6500|m2}} of landscape planting. The landscaping was designed by Urban Systems.[5]

References

1. ^{{cite web |url=https://archive.news.gov.bc.ca/releases/news_releases_2009-2013/2010PREM0180-001219.htm |title=Premier Campbell opens new Fort St. John Enerplex |date=13 October 2010}}
2. ^{{cite web |url=https://www.speedskatingnews.info/en/data/rink/KAPO/?country=CAN |title=Rink card of: Pomeroy Sport Centre Fort St. John |publisher=Speed Skating News}}
3. ^{{cite web |url=https://www.energeticcity.ca/2010/10/enerplex-becomes-pomeroy-sport-centre/ |title=Enerplex becomes Pomeroy Sport Centre |publisher=Energetic City |date=14 October 2010}}
4. ^{{cite web |url=http://iceskatingresources.org/2rinksInsideSpeedOval.pdf |title=Fort St. John Enerplex Long Track Speed skating |publisher=Ice Skating Resources |format=PDF}}
5. ^{{cite web |url=http://urbansystems.ca/project/fort-st-johns-enerplex-landscape/ |title=Fort St. John Enerplex landscape |publisher=Urban Systems}}

7 : Fort St. John, British Columbia|Sports venues in British Columbia|Speed skating venues in Canada|Indoor speed skating venues|Indoor ice hockey venues in Canada|2009 establishments in British Columbia|Sports venues completed in 2009

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