As a kid growing up in Kuwait in the 80s there weren’t that many things to do, so my mum enrolled me in skating classes at the ice skating rink (that’s me with the instructor in the picture above). I took classes until one day I fell and cut my hand on skates and didn’t really go back to the rink until the early 90s. The ice skating rink in the early 90s was the place to be, with the latest hits blasting on the ice skating rink speakers while we either ice skated or hung out in the ice skating rink’s arcade. Now the ice skating rink is the next national landmark in line to be demolished.
Laila Al-Hamad is the founder of Zeri Crafts, a brand that casts light on Kuwait’s crafts heritage. Recently she published the article below in the Arab Times and with her permission, I’m publishing it here along with some great photos she took.
Tearing Down our Memories
A skating rink in the desert is about to celebrate its 40th year of life. Forty years of an architectural masterpiece that has withstood the Iraqi invasion, the harsh summers, the wear and tear of time is truly an event to be celebrated. But just as Sawaber and countless other landmarks that have marked our architectural landscape have been mindlessly demolished without a purpose or a plan, the Kuwait Ice Skating Rink too is on death row.
A tent-like structure with wooden pillars reminiscent of Bait al-Shaar, the Kuwait Ice Skating Rink is a magnificent piece of architecture that was built in close collaboration with France in the late 1970s. And just as its unique architecture stands out in the midst of the many soulless glass towers that adorn the Kuwait City skyline, its place in Kuwait’s memory landscape is even more extraordinary. Beyond any commercial value, the Ice Skating Rink is – par excellence – a pillar of our national heritage; it has shaped the childhood memories of hundreds of thousands of the country’s inhabitants. Ask anyone who grew up in Kuwait in the 1980s what the Ice Skating Rink means to them, and expect a barrage of ecstatic responses.
Against all odds, a skating rink in the desert became the perfect oasis for those seeking a cool sanctuary away from the scorching sun. Upon entering this haven of tranquility, we were welcomed by the smell of cold, a smell so rare in Kuwait that we stored it in our olfactory memory. Take a left and find yourself in the ice-skates rental room, lined with dozens of benches awaiting eager skaters. A few meters beyond that lay the space we were all here for: the big rink. Grand and majestic, the big rink is a marvel, its walls bedecked with striking geometric patterns in warm reddish and ochre hues reminiscent of Sadu weaving patterns. Here would begin our journey on the ice, energizing us with a feeling of freedom and joy that few sports can equal.
Despite a hiatus associated with the Iraqi invasion, the rink has been operational for almost 4 decades, welcoming hundreds of thousands of visitors a year. In my case, what was part of my childhood became part of my adulthood: I would take my children there to learn to skate as would many of my friends. This generational link gives the ice skating rink a special status; whereas many of the landmarks of our youth – including cinemas and theaters – have been abandoned or demolished, the rink has stood firm in its resilience. One of the few non-consumeristic enterprises in the country, it continues to be a refuge for those seeking family fun in a non-commercial setting. The unique modernist design fills us with a sense of pride linked to Kuwait’s golden age of architecture, where function met aesthetics. The place leaves few of us unmoved.
Inaugurated in 1980, the rink was not only the first such structure in Kuwait, but also the first ice skating complex in the whole of the Middle East. March 2020 marks its 40th anniversary. But instead of celebrating this milestone, we are getting ready for its imminent demolition. It is being sacrificed for the Shaheed Park phase 3 extension, making way for a concert hall and – ironically enough – a new skating rink. The rink is facing demolition not because of a lack of demand from the public (it welcomes 150,000 visitors a year), nor because of any maintenance or structural issues, but because someone has decided to build something new. Why demolish a perfectly functioning architectural masterpiece? Why not renovate and revitalize the existing structure and integrate it into the park? We can only gain from bridging rather than eliminating the various layers of Kuwait’s built landscape.
Two weeks ago, the JACC opened its doors to a Kuwaiti musical called “Memoirs of a Sailor.” By word of mouth, news of the musical spread like wildfire. Almost every person I know, Kuwaitis and non-Kuwaitis alike, attended, some even twice. What drove thousands of people to the show was a thirst for memories, roots, a past that is now completely out of reach to us. Isn’t it paradoxical that we are looking for identity inside theaters while we destroy it outside? Many Kuwaitis are upset about the neglect and erasure of their culture in its many forms; the architecture, the crafts and even the natural environment through the pollution of the sea.
The senseless destruction of our architectural heritage for the extraction of commercial value for the few is a violation of our national heritage. The Kuwait Ice Skating Rink should not be the next victim on the list of public executions that awaits our many landmarks. In a spirit of sustainability, and historical and architectural preservation, the structure should become a listed architectural landmark integrated into the new extension. May our development be respectful of our memories and our environment. And may wisdom and the public good prevail.
By Laila Al-Hamad
53 replies on “Ice Skating Rink to be Demolished”
I am so so so sad over this, some of my favorite memories were made in this building. Doesn’t feel real that its being demolished
The no.1 hangout spot to celebrate our exams ending in the 80s and 90s – and then waiting outside with classmates for our parents to come pick us up ❤️
Golden days
*Millennial Drama Sobbing*
Yes because UNESCO which was created sometime in the 60s was founded by millenials because millenials traveled back in time to create it.
I mean really.
Are you saying the Ice rink is protected by UNESCO?
It should be so should a lot of Kuwait landmarks like the Towers of course.
Yeah.. no.
So “Kuwait” wants to demolish and/or preserve its Towers?
Yeah…no.
Also cattiness: yeah…no.
Sooooo sad to hear about this… I was already sad to hear about the closure of the entertainment city, then demolition of Sawaber and now this???? Heart breaking 😭…memories lost forever… reminds us about how fragile our life is… and how a few people’s decision can hurt 1000s….
Mere words can’t do justice to the memories the Ice Skating Rink has in everyone’s hearts. The amazement just looking at the building as kids and to grab those tickets and sizing up your skates to then entering the fresh change of weather which got cold then very quickly and finally watching the jocks (hockey players) do their tricks and learning off their moves to becoming pretty good skaters ourselves.
I also have fond memories of a cultural event which spanned for a week just before the invasion.
The place was opened again right after the liberation when there was nothing else and was the place to be. I remember the best music being played there and they even dimmed the lights at times which made it seem like a night club on ice. The video games section and the burgers and fries and heck even the other rink inside which gave ladies and children a place to be private or practice before coming into the larger one.
I’ve taken my kids there and I was just thinking of taking them there again soon.
Like all good memories come to an end physically like the old airplane landing strip which gave way to the Ice Skating Rink where much older generations had their memories we may have to pave way for a change. Now it’s true that old landmarks can’t be messed with just like that and there should be an initiative taken to make sure we preserve these iconic places. I’ve always seen the ice skating rink as Kuwait’s equivalent to the Opera House in Sydney. If someone has the connections they can suggest incorporating the existing building with the new phase of the Shaheed Park surrounding it rather then making a new structure altogether. Food for thought…
Back when I used to work in the city near the rink, we used to head there during our lunch breaks in the summer to cool down and have McDonalds.
Even tho I haven’t been there in more than 20 years, I can still vividly remember the scent of the ice
wtf 🙁 I have so many memories with this place.
Which ice skating rink is this? The one infront of ooredoo tower?
yes
whats next Kuwait towers for something new?
Nostalgia is a dangerous thing. It’s time to realise that economic growth and change is necessary. Think about it carefully, removing the ice rink creates jobs and improves Kuwait’s infrastructure. It is senseless to maintain buildings which cost more than they earn. Furthermore, the discussion of heritage in such a young country is strange. By that notion, I should be nostalgic for a barren desert. What is more important, is diversifying Kuwait’s economic growth, protecting Kuwaiti jobs and national security. Without this, there is no is heritage or future. If it is a viable building, then offer contract tenures to maintain and completely privatise the running of the skating rink. This is the new reality of the gulf with a very young growing population. Times are changing! It’s essential!
Kindly explain how removing the ice rink and replacing it with a new one will create more jobs for Kuwaitis
Engineering jobs and innovation
With this logic, the Tour Eiffel should be demolished as should the Taj Mahal, the Empire State building and every other structure that has added value to a landscape. I don’t think you can quantify the value of a place solely on the number of jobs it creates. You have to think of the overall costs of maintaining a perfectly functioning structure against the environmental damage associated with demolitions. Kuwait is responsible for one of the highest waste generation per capita in the world. Every year, more than 2 million tons of solid waste is generated. Are you happy breathing dust particles and God knows what chemicals? Demolition should be a last resort, not the path of choice. The new and the old can co-exist. Kuwait doesn’t lack new buildings- construction is at every corner. What it lacks is the vision to build bridges between new and old, to give value to complexity and a collective memory.
Yes but they are culturallly significant and have impacted the world. Please justify how the ice skating rink has contributed to world. The issue regarding the pollution is a government policy matter.
The monuments I listed have become culturally significant, they weren’t born with that purpose (with the exception of the Taj Mahal). And more importantly, a building need not become a monument in order to be preserved. It needs to be significant for the community it serves; in the case of the ice skating rink, it has served its purpose above and beyond; its architecture towers over anything built in Kuwait nowadays; and it is in good condition. Either remodel the interior or repurpose it; demolition is a violent and unsustainable course of action.
Wouldn’t preservation be more labour-intensive, which means more jobs? It’s also good for the environment. I’m guessing fewer building materials are required to refurbish old ones, which can be better for the environment in general.
It has nothing to do with bringing employment to Kuwaitis, the citizens who work in the park are volunteers? The volunteers are nice but some of them annoy me when they constantly yell at the kids for going on the grass, getting too close to the water structures and so on. It’s as if they want to destroy the past and anything linked to it, the govt schools don’t teach the children about the invasion and other historical moments as if it never happened.
How is Kuwait a young country? Kuwait and the surrounding countries have thousands of years of history, Falaika Island dates back to 3000 BC. Just because the desert lands were taken over by other rulers and divided into separate countries in the last hundred years doesn’t mean there isn’t a history.
We can say the same about USA considering there was no United States of America until 1776.
If they plan on having a skating rink why can’t they refurbish this one and build around it? They tend to tear down historical places only to build new versions of the old which makes no sense. A new concert hall? Didn’t they just build a huge concert hall? How many concerts do we have that aren’t banned or canceled? My first concert in Kuwait was in 2003 for the Kuwait Miami band held in the skating rink and I thought, wow, this is so cool.
It’s funny how families don’t cook at home any more yet they wait in line at the bougie restaurants selling old Kuwaiti dishes for 12 KD a plate. Looks like I need to get back on the road and take pictures of what remains of the old houses and buildings as it doesn’t seem like they will be around for long.
WTF?? “What is more important, is diversifying Kuwait’s economic growth, protecting Kuwaiti jobs and national security.” Are you ok? Lets just demolish everything, including the Towers, because demolishing them will of course create new jobs. Lets just built a new, shiny SuperMegaGrand Avenues instead. Yeah, another mall. We don’t need no greenery, no Ice skating rink, no Entertaiment city, no Shaab park, nothing. We need more restaurants and malls, yay!
such lovely childhood memories !!! entertainment city, shaab garden, now this???
Although I didn’t skate, I surely visited the skating rink more than few times to create some kind of special bond with the place I would get nostalgic over whenever passing by. So yeah, I’m saddened to see yet another landmark from the best passages of time anyone can ever go through, adolescence, get taken down.
Iconic place, lights, latest songs, food, falling down, and the parking lot…. damn old good days
Feeling sorry for its removal
A lot of these places are frozen in time and offer great memories to come back to. Instead of being doomed for destruction, they can be renovated or even re-used. I dont get why they dont want to make that a possibility – preserving heritage while also allowing the “new” to evolve.
If they deem the place useless, Kuwait can sustainably modify the built heritage for new uses, i.e: an old factory with a long history somewhere in the world now houses a restaurant, gallery, retail etc. Likewise, landmarks around the world are protected for their historic significance and aren’t labeled useless but instead, turned into a park or some other project (but we’re talking centuries upon centuries of heritage).
Kuwait is still young, but there should be some things left of our heritage to pass on to future generations. So hopefully..it wont surprise us with more demolitions.
I remember when they held concerts there. It’s sad that the rink is going away, when is it gonna happen?
Good honestly it was a pretty bad ice skating ring randomly located in a empty part of Kuwait City. The comments here are dramatic and hilarious comparing the ice skating rink to the taj mahal or eiffel tower lol. Yes I enjoyed the school field trips we had to the ice skating rink, but I haven’t gone back their since what 12???? and its barely used anymore. Lets not forget this isn’t the 80s or 90s anymore where their was nothing to do in Kuwait besides showbiz and ice skating. The new younger generation have much more better choices of recreational activities to do including other skating rinks around Kuwait. Its funny all the people here crying about their memories when they probably haven’t even thought about the ice skating rink for years really pathetic.
This coming from someone calling themselves “jaded”.
I’m honestly sick and tired of people here in Kuwait who are miserable, bitter and jaded. I walk away from them.
Wow what a thoughtful and meaningful response that adds a lot to the discussion, and you got that all from my nickname?? maybe you should do palm readings since you figured that all out from a name. It also has nothing to do with the discussion, When the debate is lost, slander becomes the tool of the loser.
“Bollywood Over Hollywood, what a silly name, you must be a joke in real life I am honestly sick and tired of immature jokers in life. I walk away from them.”
See how easy that was? 🙂
Now lets please try and keep the discussion relevant to the topic without posting personal attacks. My point was that the ice skating ring is nowhere near comparable to taj mahal and that if people really cared, then why was it sitting empty for so long?
I was ok with sawaber but this is just wrong
True, we used to go their as kids and teens, but now I visited the place , it’s dead! if the owner or management of that place could have worked and made it more social , it would have sparked.
Even the employees of MacDonalds are bored there because there is no customers
it’s sad news but like everyone is saying they can renovate it and make it a big hype again but that needs money of course.
And why doesn’t the amiri diwan want to integrate it with shaheed phase 3?
It would be a very cool addition to their portfolio
I was wondering that myself! If they are going to join it to Shaheed, and add an ice skating rink anyway, why not refurbish and integrate the current rink into Shaheed?!
Are people having schizophrenia here?!
One time they complain about everything is old .. once the government start renewing things they also complain!
Well it’s more so about demolishing history… they can revamp the interior or exterior without knocking everything down completely. Cities do this all the time. Carefully refurbish the outside while still keeping everything in tact.
There’s so much land available.. if they want to build more structures they have other areas to do it in..
I totally agree ive been going there for a while and it’s always empty, im surprised by the amount of people that are outraged
I was a member there for nearly 2 years, spending the entire 2 years there, and have countless beautiful memories inside. This isn’t particularly about the ice skating rink, and this is not to say that i agree with it’s demolition, but i am seeing a trend nowadays where peopld are only showing there outrage when things are going away. Where was everyone, when the thing was arounf? Why do people seem to only appreciate things when they’re destined to end? The same goes with bayt lothan, sawaber, and now the rink. The point im trying to make is, try to appreciate everything we still have, if you are commited to preservation, preserve the cleanliness of this country, preserve the beaches, the parks, go spend time on them with your families.
you people expect the government to pay crazy sums of money keeping up these under-utilised buildings and generally pointless buildings because you “had memories”. Jesus Christ grow up, I had endless fun times there but things gotta go when things gotta go. And for people comparing this place to the Sydney opera house and Eiffel Tower, those places make huge incomes to the economy because it makes people want to visit. When I drive past this place and the other horrible buildings surrounding the fourseasons I wanna stay away.
Well, they want to build another ice skating rink, so how will that change the sum spent on upkeeping the “underutilised buildings” as you called them. And you speaking about it as a “horrible place”, you definitely haven’t been there, or just simply are an ignorant person.
I agree Sulaiman. We also need to remove all the lawns and trees from the roads because they consume a lot of water which is really hitting our economy. Museums and scientific centers are useless because they too use space and electricity with zero profit. To enter a new economy age Kuwait should resemble something like now demolished Kowloon city in Hong Kong – every inch of space is making profit.
I heard from a friend that they plan to demolish Kuwait Towers and aqua park in 2022 to build a new shopping mall with biggest food court in Middle East. I can’t wait to eat there.
That’s great news!
Completely agree, Mark. And so sad for the news 🙁
It’s sad to see the ice rink go the Bayt Lothan way!
Back in the day it was ‘THE’ place where you could hang out with your chums and singles could hope to co-mingle with other singles like them; expats and locals – no holds barred.
Have fond memories of the friendly ice hockey matches that used to be played there between the Diplomats and the Swedish Vikings, and reading all about it on the sports page of the next day’s broadsheets. Life everywhere was so simple and straightforward back then!
Going off on a tangent my heart still aches for the old Arabian Gulf street with its virgin shoreline and beaches before they turned it into a mammoth concrete project also known as The Waterfront. Do y’all remember the beautiful mesmerizing butterfly lighting they had set up along the entire length of the Gulf road? No wonder Kuwait got its epiteth – The Bride of the Persian Gulf on cue from the razzle dazzle of the Gulf road. Sadly, they took it all away and the invasion had nothing to do with it.
Wait.. how old are you?
Is there nothing we can do to save it?
@waslove- I am 61 going on 16, you are 16 going on 61.
Chin up, guys it’s not the end of the world!
Change can sometimes be good too- perhaps they are building it bigger and better. As cliched as it gets, we know full well change is the only constant in life and this sorta thing like it or not, is typical of urban renewal undertakings everywhere. Imagine if all of us collectively put on our rose tinted glasses insisting not to tear apart the Greenbelt garden for old times sake, the Shaheed Park would never have seen the light of day. I guess, we are all agreed Kuwait is richer for it and all of us are better off for it.
Also dont let’s forget the Ice Rink was turned Into a morgue during the dark days of the invasion which can call for total renewal from the ground up. In fact they should have done this 25 years back.
Guys the last news about ice skating is: the project is canceled because the ice skating is protected by the National Council for Culture, Arts.
The ice skating now welcomes the visitors as usual.
The al shaheed park still not canceled but they won’t destroy the ice skating ^_^