Lee Valley Ice Centre Building, Olympic size ice rinks Images, LVRPA News, Twin pad sport facility

Lee Valley Ice Centre

14 June 2023
Lee Valley Ice Centre opening, Waltham Forest, Lee Valley, east London, southeast England, UK
Architect: FaulknerBrowns Architects ; Landscape Design: LDA Design
Lee Valley Ice Centre London building
photo courtesy of LDA Design
Lee Valley Ice Centre London building
Lee Valley Regional Park Authority is opening a new Lee Valley Ice Centre (LVIC) in Waltham Forest, east London on 17 June following a £30m project to create two Olympic-sized ice rinks, a gym, studios, café, and community space on the site of its old single rink venue. LDA Design is responsible for the £1.5m landscape transformation to help realise the ecological potential as part of the wider Lee Valley Regional Park.

10 Nov 2020

Lee Valley Ice Centre London News

Design: FaulknerBrowns, architects

Location: Lee Valley, south east England, UK

Lee Valley Ice Centre London

Plans by FaulknerBrowns for twin-pad Lee Valley Ice Centre approved

Plans submitted to Waltham Forest Council for London’s first ever Olympic-sized twin-pad ice centre, have received planning approval, pending second stage approval from the GLA.

Designed by FaulknerBrowns Architects on behalf of Lee Valley Regional Park Authority (LVRPA), the new £30 million venue will replace the existing single-pad Lee Valley Ice Centre which, after 36 years of use, is nearing the end of its operational life and struggling to meet demand.

The facility will include two Olympic size ice rinks with capacity for 800 spectators, a gym and exercise studio, a multi-purpose studio and a café. The current Lee Valley Ice Centre is one of the most popular ice-skating venues in the UK accommodating around 279,000 visits a year from across London and the wider region. The new building will double the capacity to 557,000 visits per year and will expand the range of activities that can be run at the centre concurrently. This will be to the benefit of the community which will also be able to use the new venue as a base to explore the surrounding green spaces.

Lee Valley Ice Centre London building

The site for the new ice centre forms part of the 26 mile-long Lee Valley Regional Park (LVRP). The park’s 10,000 acres comprise a diverse mix of heritage sites, nature reserves and award-winning green spaces alongside world class sports venues, marinas and gardens attracting over 7.3 million visits a year. Located within LVRP are three London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games venues: one of which—Lee Valley White Water Centre—was also designed by FaulknerBrowns.

The entire site for Lee Valley Ice Centre is within Metropolitan Open Land – a land designation which is afforded the same level of protection as the Metropolitan Green Belt. The northern edge of the site faces onto Leyton Marsh and the north west corner of the site is designated as a Site of Metropolitan Importance to Nature Conservation (SMINC), which extends along the edge of the River Lea to the north. As a result, the design team were acutely aware of their responsibility to bring forward a sensitive proposal for the site which protected its unique natural character.

site layout:
Lee Valley Ice Centre London site

From the outset, one of the overarching principles of the project has been the need to produce as tight and efficient a building footprint as possible to mitigate the impact on MOL, the landscape of the Regional Park, and its biodiversity and habitat. Locating the ice rinks to each side with the circulation and support spaces between, has allowed the building to be reduced to the minimum footprint possible, without compromising the functional layout. Further area savings have been made by closely following the curvature of the ice pads with the building line on the external corners.

The massing concept responds to its context by adopting the principle of a pavilion within the Regional Park, with a consistent architectural language to each elevation. There is no front or back to the building, each side addresses its surroundings in the same manner.

A heavy weight plinth to the lower portion of the elevation responds to the flat surroundings and
anchors the building within the landscape. The plinth forms a podium, above which sit the ice halls, which are contained internally with insulated cladding panels to create two environmentally control “fridges”.

ground floor plan:
Lee Valley Ice Centre London ground floor plan

The two fridges are wrapped by a copper-hued, metal-clad band. The band is separated from the Plinth, with a flowing curving lower edge revealing the internal volumes and creating the impression it is floating within the landscape.

Movement data analysis showed that the location and orientation of the existing ice centre on the site interrupted key circulation routes through the park. Although larger in size, the new facility has been rotated and sited in a way that natural movement through the green spaces has been restored, the landscaping strategy creating a welcoming gateway to the neighbouring Leyton Marsh.

The new centre is highly sustainable and would see environmental improvements which would transform the area with significant native planting and landscape enhancements which will result in a significant biodiversity net gain of over 35%. Energy efficiency in the new Ice Centre will be maximised through high performance insulation and highly efficient air source heat pumps. Roof mounted photovoltaic panels will generate energy for the new centre and melted ice will be filtered through reed beds and then used to create new wetland habitats on site with an emphasis on biodiversity enhancement.

Leighton Cooksey, Associate at FaulknerBrowns, said: “The Lee Valley Ice Centre represents an exciting opportunity to create a much-needed facility for London and the wider region, promoting participation in ice sports in a way that benefits the sustainability and biodiversity of this unique site”.

first floor plan:
Lee Valley Ice Centre London first floor plan

Lee Valley Ice Centre UK – Building Information

Client: Lee Valley Regional Park Authority
Architects: FaulknerBrowns Architects
Project Manager: Wrenbridge Sport
Structural and Civil Engineering: Enginuity
MEP Engineering: Max Fordham
Landscape Architects: LDA Design
Specialist Refrigeration Consultants: Ice Tech UK

Lee Valley Ice Centre images / information received 101120

Location: Lee Valley, Broxbourne, Hertfordshire, England, UK

Lee Valley Buildings

Lee Valley White Water Centre
Design: FaulknerBrowns, architects
White Water Canoe Centre, Lee Valley London timber facade
photograph © Keepclicking
Lee Valley White Water Canoe Centre

Lee Valley White Water Centre

Lower Lee valley London

London Buildings

Contemporary London Building Designs

London Architecture Links – chronological list

London Architecture Tours by e-architect

London Architects Offices

London Architecture

London Olympic Buildings

London Olympics Velodrome

Aquatics Centre London

Comments / photos for the Lee Valley Ice Centre Architecture page welcome

London