• Durham Scoop
  • Posts
  • Echoes on Ice: Durham’s ice rink lives on in community exhibition

Echoes on Ice: Durham’s ice rink lives on in community exhibition

A conversation with the exhibition's organisers about the ice rink's legacy and lasting impact on the community.

If you were there, you’ll never forget it. For decades, Durham Ice Rink was at the heart of the city’s social life. From Friday night ice discos to crowds roaring on the Wasps every Sunday, not to mention a proud history of figure skating and speed skating, the riverside rink was the place to be.

Almost 30 years after the ice was taken up, and a decade after the ramshackle corrugated iron shed was finally demolished, those memories burn as bright as ever. An exhibition telling the story enters its final days this week finishing on Friday 17 May at the Dead Dog Gallery, just over the road from where the rink once stood.

The show, set up by CYAN CIC’s Lewis Hobson, has attracted record crowds to the gallery as former rink rats revel in some nostalgia and take the chance to show their kids what it was all about.

Best of all, the exhibition is very much a ground-up initiative, drawing on artefacts and memories from the community rather than trying to impose a narrative from above.

Durham Wasps fan banner. One of the many artefacts on display at the exhibition

For Lewis, that was the key to making the project work. Too young to remember the rink himself, he started with family memories and watched the story take off from there – often in surprising directions.

“At first, what caught my interest was the hand-made stuff,” he said. “I think we’re losing sight of our ability to make stuff in the way that our parents or grandparents had to back in the day.

“I was fascinated by the badges and the handmade stuff, the scrapbooks and banners. People would have these things, but they didn’t imagine anyone else would be interested. I was like ‘mate, that’s definitely going in!’

“So we got these scrapbooks that the young lasses were making about these really cool ice skaters. It says so much about the cult of celebrity around the players, how big the whole thing was, what it was like to be part of that dynamic. For me, that’s where the fun part is.”

One of the most exciting finds was a clutch of trophies won by the Wasps during the peak of their powers in British Ice Hockey. Long thought to be lost, they were found in a garage, battered and faded.

Collection of Durham Wasp trophies thought to be lost

One of the most exciting finds was a clutch of trophies won by the Wasps during the peak of their powers in British Ice Hockey. Long thought to be lost, they were found in a garage, battered and faded, and are on display at the gallery. For Lewis, that sense of lost and found is what the exhibition is all about.

Meanwhile, after opening night and, later, a visit from Olympic figure skating champions Torvill & Dean, more memories emerged. “We had a few local figure skating people come along, and they were keen to tell us how it wasn’t just about the Wasps,” Lewis said.

“Durham was sending champions all over in the figure skating as well. They had one notoriously fierce teacher. Everybody talks about how she was really scary, but she used to train these national champions.

“We’d love to have more about that.”

And while the exhibition closes on Friday, that’s not the end of the story. Filmmaker Carl Joyce is already working on a documentary film about the rink and the community it inspired.

“When we interviewed Lewis’s family, it was so emotional,” Carl said. “Sometimes they were in tears, explaining their memories. Every time we spoke to someone, you got this sense that we were unearthing a really significant story.

“It was a whole sense of the family, the community that grew up around the rink. Everyone knew each other, they made lifelong friends, met their future husbands or wives. That’s really special, and I think that’s why people have such strong, vivid memories. It was much more than just an ice rink.”

The ice may have melted away, but those memories live forever.

The exhibition closes on 17 May. You can learn more about the project by visiting the website or Facebook page.