Heilongjiang Ice Training Center is a comprehensive ice training base invested by the State Sports Commission in 1973 and managed by the Heilongjiang Sports Commission after its completion. It is a national and local co-built base and a Class I unit of public utilities. The center covers an area of 91,545 square meters, with three existing venues, including speed skating hall, short track ice skating hall and figure skating training hall. Over the past 40 years, the center has continuously improved the training and competition conditions of the venues, introduced advanced facilities and equipment, paid attention to the research and development of ice making technology, and cultivated a large number of outstanding ice sports talents, such as Wang Meng, Xue Ruihong, Wang Manli, Zhang Hong, Gao Tingyu, Fan Kexin and a large number of world champions and Olympic champions. The center has been identified by the State General Administration of Sport Winter Center as a high-level ice sports training base, and in 2014 was named by the State General Administration of Sport as "national comprehensive sports training base", is one of the 15 national comprehensive training bases.
The speed skating hall was built in 1995, with a construction area of 22,268 square meters, a length of 192m, a width of 80m and a height of 29m. There is a speed skating rink and two short track ice skating rink. The museum has nearly 1594 seats, with a total of three floors. Speed skating venue for the international standard 400m track, with meeting rooms, VIP rooms, athletes' lounge, referee's lounge, news media and TV studios and other ancillary facilities. The museum has hosted the 3rd Asian Winter Games, the 24th World University Winter Games, the 2002, 2004, 2006, 2012, 2016 World Cup speed skating competitions, the 2000, 2005, 2009 Asian Cup and World Cup speed skating Asian Qualifying competitions, the first China-Russia Winter Games, The eighth and ninth National Games speed skating competition, the tenth National Winter Games speed skating competition, the national Youth Sunshine Sports Conference and a series of competitions.
The ice skating hall was built in 1983. The building area of the museum is 9242 square meters, the length is 120m, the width is 80m, and the height is 18.5m. The use area of the venue is 1830 square meters, the length of the venue is 61m, the width is 30m, the radius is 8.5m, and the number of audience seats is 2767. It can be used for short track speed skating, figure skating, ice hockey, curling and other training competitions. The hall has hosted the third Asian Winter Games short track competition, the 24th World University Winter Games Curling competition, the 2004 World Junior Figure Skating Grand Prix, the second and third Asian Cup short track competition, the 2003 Asian Men's Basketball Championship, the first China-Russia Winter Games, the National Youth Sunshine Sports Conference, and the National Youth Sunshine Sports Conference. The fifth, seventh and tenth National Winter Games, the annual national Short track speed skating League and figure skating series and a series of competitions.
Figure skating training hall, built in 2008, construction area 12093 square meters. The ground floor is a standard pattern training ground, 65m long, 34m wide, 11m high, and two standard curling training paths. The second floor is a land warm-up and equipment training ground for athletes with nearly 2000 square meters. The functional facilities of each room are fully equipped to meet the needs of normal training and pre-game warm-up training.
In addition to the above facilities, the center also has refrigeration room, substation, air conditioning room, water pump room, heat supply station, stadium and so on.
Ice skating and figure skating generally open from July and August to April of the following year, speed skating generally open from September to the end of March of the following year. During the ice season, they train from Monday to Saturday, and stop for a day on Sunday to repair the ice surface. Training day for more than 1,000 people, undertake speed skating, short track speed skating, figure skating, curling, ice hockey and other project team training guarantee tasks, including provincial professional teams, reserve talent teams, cities and amateur sports school teams, for the construction of professional echelon needs, these teams are free ice training all year round. The venue runs for as little as 12 hours a day, more than 20 hours, and the utilization rate of the venue is more than 90%. It hosts more than 20 national and provincial level competitions every year, and receives more than 130,000 athletes, coaches and spectators.
We make full use of the venue advantage resources of the ice center, cultivate young ice sports enthusiasts and build a reserve talent team, and set up fixed ice time every day for local amateur teams and traditional schools to carry out ice sports, including speed skating, short track speed skating, curling and ice hockey, and the number of people on the ice every day reaches more than 300.