Eatontown Roller Rink, 105 State Route 35, Eastontown, NJ. It was already fenced off and about to demolished. Source: Flickr/Marcel.
Eatontown Roller Rink, 105 State Route 35, Eastontown, NJ. Noticed the decay of the stucco wall. And the fence to block off. Long since demolished. Source: Flickr/Elizabeth.
Eatontown Roller Rink, 105 State Route 35, Eastontown, NJ. The collapse. Source: Legend Has It… and Atlanticville. (Both links are broken. They are gone. Good thing we saved them!
Eatontown Roller Rink, 105 State Route 35, Eastontown, NJ. The collapse. Source: Legend Has It… and Atlanticville.
Eatontown Roller Rink, 105 State Route 35, Eastontown, NJ. The collapse. You can see it is Laminated Wood for the Bow Truss Roof design. Very common at rinks, former A&P stores like this was and bowling alleys. Source: Legend Has It… and Atlanticville.
Eatontown Roller Rink, 105 State Route 35, Eatontown, NJ. This article was announcing the new opening rink for June 1973. It opened on 27 June 1973, just 10 days after the infamous Watergate Break-in just a few hundred miles away but this article on the rink the day before Watergate. Source: Record - Saturday 16 June 1973, page 22, first and second column (top). Photo provided by Richard Jones.
Eatontown Roller Rink, 105 State Route 35, Eastontown, NJ. The roof collapse. Source: NJ.com - 20 February 2019.
America On Wheels Eatontown 105 State Route 35, Eastontown, NJ
Eatontown Roller Rink 105 State Route 35, Eastontown, NJ
Eatontown Roller Rink 105 State Route 35, Eastontown, NJ
This rink was in operation back in the 20th Century. The architecture was very much 1960s modernism along with Segmental Arch roof as you can see the bottom photo.
First opened on Wednesday 27 June 1973 and It was closed in 2005. On Thursday 19 February 2009, the high winds took care of some of the torn down that the owner wanted it demolished.
America on Wheels first opened this rink as their 10th rink on that summer day in 1973 with Robert Cochran managing the rink. But later, Richard Jones managed it from 1978 and then bought the rink from AOW in 1988.
There are no interior photos unfortunately. The skateboarders had their skate boarding from 2003 to 2005. (YouTube video has been removed or deleted).
Apparently the place was running profitability however, unsafe reasons likely the building itself which was old was having problems and the closure in 2005 truly was at right time before its collapsed in 2009 as seen in photo.
It was Bow Roof where the rink was and flat up front part such as bathrooms, snack bar, office, storage, etc. because it was an A&P Supermarket that closed around 1960s.
Side note, if you were to drive by there to see the former rink, please check next door-it was a classic 1950s themed jet-setting awing car wash similar appearance to the demolished Tiny Naylor's on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles. (see comparison here: Tiny Naylor's-Sunset Boulevard). This is one of the area 50s, Googie (NOT Google) Architecture, Mid-Century, and Roller Skating fans can enjoy this as part of a trip. Save the car wash! Save the car Wash! (Echo of BTTF movie the woman shouted to the couple). I strongly believed this was a Philips 66 Gas Station.
Oh one more thing, the rink was not a rebooted. It was a continuation after Richard bought the rink from AOW. Kind of like AT&T was split in 1980 and then sold to Bell Atlantic, then Verizon, then Time Warner, and now Comcast. Depends on what direction. AT&T is still around, Verizon is still around. So is Time Warner but their purposes are different now.
Let's say this way, Disney bought 20th Century Fox and it is now 20th Century Studios to separate from Fox company that runs Fox News and related in that area of industry. AOW is still around today.
UPDATE! -- 27 June 2022.
I got an email from R. Jones who was the manager and operator of the Eatontown Roller Rink. This is edited for this page. This is what he has to say. Thank you Richard.
I may have written you prior, I am Richard Jones, I was a Mgr, and then Owner of America On Wheels, Eatontown, NJ and the only GM for Brick Roller Forum, NJ. for it's 8 years of operation, during the "BOOM" years.
I would like to give you some info.
FYI: Eatontown Roller Rink: Opened on 6/27/1973 and I personally closed it on 10/1/2005, a 23,500 s/f bldg with Bow Truss Roof, and an 80 x 170 Roll On Finish Maple Floor.
I am now fully retired and live in Western NY where I grew up and learned the roller rink trade working at Olympic Park Roller Rink, for [the Late] Carl Gardner in late 60's thru 71.
My timeframe of roller rink works was:
Late 1960's to 1970's [at] Olympic Park, Rochester, [New York}.
[Served] 1971 to 1975 in Vietnam war. (Thank you for your service to defend the Constitution of the United States and our Faith in the LORD Jesus Christ.)
[From] 1976 to 1977 Both Skate World and Skate Arena [as Manager] in Lincoln, NE, for Seth Scott,
In mid 70's I worked as [Assistant Manager] to Dave Brown, for Jack and Nancy Becker in Seabrook, MD.
In 1978, scooped up by America on Wheels from 1978 to 1988 when I bought their interest out in Eatontown and Brick.
I visited Mattydale one time with Carl Gardner in the late 60's. (Ah, you have seen Sports-O-Rama Roller Rink, Richard! Nice! I worked there in the start of 1990s).
UPDATE! -- Added on 03 July 2022.
On your website, you show Eatontown in collapsed state. In the last pic you can actually see what I know as Truss #1 and if you look closely you can see at the top of the pic on the left a repair laminate beam that replaced a prior cracked timber in the 80's or 90's. As the timbers cracked in time, every few years replacements would be done with then modern, and much stronger laminate replacement beams. (Strands of wood glued together with high pressure)
Furthermore in pics you will note cement pier columns on the outside of the building down each exterior side wall which were the load bearing point for each bow truss that spanned the 120' across.
This is a classic design used a LOT by A&P supermarkets and many bowling alleys built in mid 1900's thru 2000. The rink prior was an A&P supermarket, closing in late 60's (+-)
The collapse was surely caused by the owner of the building I sold it to not tightening the connecting bolts yearly and when heavy rain came coupled with just the right amount of wind it caused a rocking and the ultimate collapse. Imagine if you will if you had an old shed in your backyard built out of wood and you wanted to demolish it and take to the curb for DPW to take away. You would get some guys to push and rock the shed and soon it would collapse upon itself, ie: Eatontown Roller Rink collapses.
Richard Jones sold his interest in the rink operation to an Ocean Township investment group in [around 2004] but unless the town finds something to replace the 23,000-square-foot roller rink, he can’t think of any reason to close up shop. This is perhaps the reason for his decision to close the rink.
Apparently the new owner did not take care of the roof. Richard, I knew it that government do not care. People have to take care of places and things.
Before the rink, it was an A&P Supermarket. No wonder the appearance of the front did show a trademarked A&P roofline design with an A&P Colonial Weather Vane Model of 1955 to 1970. That was trademarked design at many A&P even after 1970, they modernized the place with that same tradition design. (note, the first link is Wikipedia, the 2nd is the photograph of an example of that typical architecture design.)
It is like a Mansard with Dormer on front wall but it is not quite that either. It was an unique design.
The Interior.
It had a 80' x 170' Roll-On Finish, Non-colored painted Maple wood floor.
The Exterior.
This building has that late 1960s - early 1970s appearance with some Flatted roof but the main rink area trusses were Bow Truss. It has that Segmental Arch roof. The walls especially front wall has some kind of rough pebbles like stucco and A&P Red Bricks. And it had pillars and forms that were common back the day with rounded edges. That was common at many places including department stores, malls, and some canopy as well as hotels of its day between 1950s and mid-1970s. After that, the looks changed quite a bit.
it was an A&P Supermarket. No wonder the appearance of the front did show a trademarked A&P roofline design with an A&P Colonial Weather Vane Model of 1955 to 1970. That was trademarked design at many A&P even after 1970, they modernized the place with that same tradition design.
It is like a Mansard with Dormer but it is not quite that either. It was an unique design.
UPDATE! -- 04 July 2022.
Here is more information about the appearance Richard Jones send me and to my friendly historian who runs his site--
Just to take up my time and maybe you guys to I will give you this historical note/perspective
The Eatontown rink was a former A&P, and when AOW bought it they added a 20' deep by 120' wide flat roof addition across the entire front where big glass windows were for A&P, and a small awning entry area to the left front, clearly evidenced by collapse pics. I googled A&P store images and there a dozen if not more images of stores with clear glass fronts and the regular gable roof with bell tower design upon it. (They are called A & P Colonial Weather Vane Architecture Design)
AOW needed room for accessory uses and added the 20' addition to the front to give the rink more ground level space. They were able to get zoning approval as I understand because they agreed not to use the second story mezzanine located in the rear (A&P [manager] office, accounting, employee rest rooms, etc..)as it had no value to AOW being on a second level, and it just became a junk storage for [Christmas decoration] and the like.
So I tell you this so if you look at the collapse pictures or the architect's rendering in the grand opening article or other pics and say "Hey it may be an A&P originally but something is out of kilter, what looks different, that is why..
No big news just some info[rmation]
--R. Jones.
The Stats:
Rink Size: 80' x 170' Floor: Roll On Finish, non-color painted Maple wood floor.
Floor Layout: N/A.
Building Size: 23,500 Built: 1973(?) Renovations: N/A.
Demolished: Building collapsed February 19, 2009 by high winds, demolished.
Type of Building: Free-Span Bow Wood Trusses (or common known as Bow Roof) Bricks - Walled Supermarket-styled.
Roof: Bow Truss. (exterior people would say it is like Segmental Arch) and A&P Colonial Weather Vane Model Roofline design of 1955 to 1970.
Acres: N/A.
Organ: Brand unknown.
10 Pins Bowling Lanes: None.
Duck Pins Bowling Lanes: None.
Candlestick Bowling Lanes: None.
Pocket Billiard Tables: N/A.
Amusement Rides: None.
Driving Range Slots: None.
Miniature Golf Course: None.
Arcade: (Number unknown)
Skee-Ball: N/A.
Fascination: None.
Restaurant: None.
Cocktail lounge: None.
Laser Tag: None.
Bounce Houses: None.
Bumper Cars: None.
Go-Kart: None.
Motel: None.
Swimming Pool: None.
Jungle Gym Playground: None.
Skate Park: None.
Operated: (Overall)-- 27 June 1973 to 01 October 2005.
America On Wheels Eatontown: 27 June 1973 to 1988.
Eatontown Roller Rink: 1988 to 01 October 2005.
Reason for Closure:
America On Wheels Eatontown: Richard Jones was manager bought out interest completely from AOW.
Eatontown Roller Rink: Personal decision to close. Although Richard Jones, the owner sold it about 2 years prior to an Ocean Township investment group but unless the town finds something to replace the roller rink. (This is according to Richard Jones).
Wanted: Information regarding exact dates of open/closed, why closed, size of rink, rink materials. Also photos/articles. Anyone knows or have photos, please let me know by emailing at [email protected]. Thank you. You can also use this form.
Sources:
Web Urbanist
Tiny Naylor's-Sunset Boulevard
Map Google
Facebook
YouTube
Only in Your State
Email - Richard Jones (manager and Operator). he asked me to add email here: [email protected]. You can reach him.
Yelp - reported closed.
Central Jersey - News in 2005 saying they were still operational.
NJ newspaper - Reported roof collapsed.
Date of issue: 2019.
Updated: 2021.
Updated: 03 July 2022.
Updated: 09 July 2022. (correct spelling).
Updated: 24 September 2022. (added email address).
For office use only: 7.
Worth to visit:
None, as it is all demolished. Nothing to see but see next door if it is still a Googie style building.
DISCLAIMER:
International Roller Skating Rinks History Foundation© (formerly known as Dead-Rinks) and Mark Falso are not responsible for your physical and legal injuries you may have caused. We do not endorse such illegal activities including breaking and entry of former rinks, malls, abandoned buildings, etc. Please always obey laws and regulations and property owner's signs. Some states allow purple paint on fence which means they even have guns on their property and have rights to shoot you. Please DO NOT attempt to enter property without permission!
For abandoned rinks, after you receive permission, do WEAR safety OSHA equipment including a safety glasses, pair of safety gloves, an orange vest or a jacket, and a construction helmet.
Thank you for understanding.
Dead Rinks is now International Roller Skating Rinks History Foundation© because many former names have become new names at the same rinks that are still active and due to much confusion, We have decided that International Roller Skating Rinks History Foundation© fits better for all rinks including defunct, closed, inactive, rebooted, and rinks that are still active today. For short on this site, it is International Roller Skating Rinks History© Bear with us as we change the entire site page by page each day. Thank you for understanding.
Second of all: The contents including words and photos above on this page and/or on any pages are purely educational entertainment purposes only. I provide what information from other websites, skaters, and operators and it may end up with different results between two (or more) sources. It is not our responsible for errors we caused. All sources are shown on each page. All opinions and statements of mine are also stated and are for purely educational entertainment only.
Rinks that are closed are considered dead. Rinks that are/were sold and with new management names new name(s), the former are considered dead. Previous operating rink that closed but came back years later, are considered dead because the reopening is considered rebooted, nothing to do with the former. Since we are rebooted to allow alive rinks, active rinks, we welcome those active rinks as well. It will be described.
As for “For Office Only” is for my reasoning and private legal reason for that.
Any music associated with any YouTube or any other videos provided on International Roller Skating Rinks History Foundation© are not the property of International Commercial Archeology Preservation© Group and/or International Roller Skating Rinks History Foundation© therefore we do not own the rights to the music.
All photos you submitted or we retrieved become property of International Roller Skating Rinks History Foundation© and are watermarked but they are credited to you (or where the source is from). Thank you for understanding. To understand more about this, please go to this page: Disclaimer.
© Copyrighted by International Roller Skating Rinks History Foundation©, an International Commercial Archeology Preservation© Group. All Rights Reserved. Jn 3:3 to 16. Deut. 32:7.
First opened on Wednesday 27 June 1973 and It was closed in 2005. On Thursday 19 February 2009, the high winds took care of some of the torn down that the owner wanted it demolished.
America on Wheels first opened this rink as their 10th rink on that summer day in 1973 with Robert Cochran managing the rink. But later, Richard Jones managed it from 1978 and then bought the rink from AOW in 1988.
There are no interior photos unfortunately. The skateboarders had their skate boarding from 2003 to 2005. (YouTube video has been removed or deleted).
Apparently the place was running profitability however, unsafe reasons likely the building itself which was old was having problems and the closure in 2005 truly was at right time before its collapsed in 2009 as seen in photo.
It was Bow Roof where the rink was and flat up front part such as bathrooms, snack bar, office, storage, etc. because it was an A&P Supermarket that closed around 1960s.
Side note, if you were to drive by there to see the former rink, please check next door-it was a classic 1950s themed jet-setting awing car wash similar appearance to the demolished Tiny Naylor's on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles. (see comparison here: Tiny Naylor's-Sunset Boulevard). This is one of the area 50s, Googie (NOT Google) Architecture, Mid-Century, and Roller Skating fans can enjoy this as part of a trip. Save the car wash! Save the car Wash! (Echo of BTTF movie the woman shouted to the couple). I strongly believed this was a Philips 66 Gas Station.
Oh one more thing, the rink was not a rebooted. It was a continuation after Richard bought the rink from AOW. Kind of like AT&T was split in 1980 and then sold to Bell Atlantic, then Verizon, then Time Warner, and now Comcast. Depends on what direction. AT&T is still around, Verizon is still around. So is Time Warner but their purposes are different now.
Let's say this way, Disney bought 20th Century Fox and it is now 20th Century Studios to separate from Fox company that runs Fox News and related in that area of industry. AOW is still around today.
UPDATE! -- 27 June 2022.
I got an email from R. Jones who was the manager and operator of the Eatontown Roller Rink. This is edited for this page. This is what he has to say. Thank you Richard.
I may have written you prior, I am Richard Jones, I was a Mgr, and then Owner of America On Wheels, Eatontown, NJ and the only GM for Brick Roller Forum, NJ. for it's 8 years of operation, during the "BOOM" years.
I would like to give you some info.
FYI: Eatontown Roller Rink: Opened on 6/27/1973 and I personally closed it on 10/1/2005, a 23,500 s/f bldg with Bow Truss Roof, and an 80 x 170 Roll On Finish Maple Floor.
I am now fully retired and live in Western NY where I grew up and learned the roller rink trade working at Olympic Park Roller Rink, for [the Late] Carl Gardner in late 60's thru 71.
My timeframe of roller rink works was:
Late 1960's to 1970's [at] Olympic Park, Rochester, [New York}.
[Served] 1971 to 1975 in Vietnam war. (Thank you for your service to defend the Constitution of the United States and our Faith in the LORD Jesus Christ.)
[From] 1976 to 1977 Both Skate World and Skate Arena [as Manager] in Lincoln, NE, for Seth Scott,
In mid 70's I worked as [Assistant Manager] to Dave Brown, for Jack and Nancy Becker in Seabrook, MD.
In 1978, scooped up by America on Wheels from 1978 to 1988 when I bought their interest out in Eatontown and Brick.
I visited Mattydale one time with Carl Gardner in the late 60's. (Ah, you have seen Sports-O-Rama Roller Rink, Richard! Nice! I worked there in the start of 1990s).
UPDATE! -- Added on 03 July 2022.
On your website, you show Eatontown in collapsed state. In the last pic you can actually see what I know as Truss #1 and if you look closely you can see at the top of the pic on the left a repair laminate beam that replaced a prior cracked timber in the 80's or 90's. As the timbers cracked in time, every few years replacements would be done with then modern, and much stronger laminate replacement beams. (Strands of wood glued together with high pressure)
Furthermore in pics you will note cement pier columns on the outside of the building down each exterior side wall which were the load bearing point for each bow truss that spanned the 120' across.
This is a classic design used a LOT by A&P supermarkets and many bowling alleys built in mid 1900's thru 2000. The rink prior was an A&P supermarket, closing in late 60's (+-)
The collapse was surely caused by the owner of the building I sold it to not tightening the connecting bolts yearly and when heavy rain came coupled with just the right amount of wind it caused a rocking and the ultimate collapse. Imagine if you will if you had an old shed in your backyard built out of wood and you wanted to demolish it and take to the curb for DPW to take away. You would get some guys to push and rock the shed and soon it would collapse upon itself, ie: Eatontown Roller Rink collapses.
Richard Jones sold his interest in the rink operation to an Ocean Township investment group in [around 2004] but unless the town finds something to replace the 23,000-square-foot roller rink, he can’t think of any reason to close up shop. This is perhaps the reason for his decision to close the rink.
Apparently the new owner did not take care of the roof. Richard, I knew it that government do not care. People have to take care of places and things.
Before the rink, it was an A&P Supermarket. No wonder the appearance of the front did show a trademarked A&P roofline design with an A&P Colonial Weather Vane Model of 1955 to 1970. That was trademarked design at many A&P even after 1970, they modernized the place with that same tradition design. (note, the first link is Wikipedia, the 2nd is the photograph of an example of that typical architecture design.)
It is like a Mansard with Dormer on front wall but it is not quite that either. It was an unique design.
The Interior.
It had a 80' x 170' Roll-On Finish, Non-colored painted Maple wood floor.
The Exterior.
This building has that late 1960s - early 1970s appearance with some Flatted roof but the main rink area trusses were Bow Truss. It has that Segmental Arch roof. The walls especially front wall has some kind of rough pebbles like stucco and A&P Red Bricks. And it had pillars and forms that were common back the day with rounded edges. That was common at many places including department stores, malls, and some canopy as well as hotels of its day between 1950s and mid-1970s. After that, the looks changed quite a bit.
it was an A&P Supermarket. No wonder the appearance of the front did show a trademarked A&P roofline design with an A&P Colonial Weather Vane Model of 1955 to 1970. That was trademarked design at many A&P even after 1970, they modernized the place with that same tradition design.
It is like a Mansard with Dormer but it is not quite that either. It was an unique design.
UPDATE! -- 04 July 2022.
Here is more information about the appearance Richard Jones send me and to my friendly historian who runs his site--
Just to take up my time and maybe you guys to I will give you this historical note/perspective
The Eatontown rink was a former A&P, and when AOW bought it they added a 20' deep by 120' wide flat roof addition across the entire front where big glass windows were for A&P, and a small awning entry area to the left front, clearly evidenced by collapse pics. I googled A&P store images and there a dozen if not more images of stores with clear glass fronts and the regular gable roof with bell tower design upon it. (They are called A & P Colonial Weather Vane Architecture Design)
AOW needed room for accessory uses and added the 20' addition to the front to give the rink more ground level space. They were able to get zoning approval as I understand because they agreed not to use the second story mezzanine located in the rear (A&P [manager] office, accounting, employee rest rooms, etc..)as it had no value to AOW being on a second level, and it just became a junk storage for [Christmas decoration] and the like.
So I tell you this so if you look at the collapse pictures or the architect's rendering in the grand opening article or other pics and say "Hey it may be an A&P originally but something is out of kilter, what looks different, that is why..
No big news just some info[rmation]
--R. Jones.
The Stats:
Rink Size: 80' x 170' Floor: Roll On Finish, non-color painted Maple wood floor.
Floor Layout: N/A.
Building Size: 23,500 Built: 1973(?) Renovations: N/A.
Demolished: Building collapsed February 19, 2009 by high winds, demolished.
Type of Building: Free-Span Bow Wood Trusses (or common known as Bow Roof) Bricks - Walled Supermarket-styled.
Roof: Bow Truss. (exterior people would say it is like Segmental Arch) and A&P Colonial Weather Vane Model Roofline design of 1955 to 1970.
Acres: N/A.
Organ: Brand unknown.
10 Pins Bowling Lanes: None.
Duck Pins Bowling Lanes: None.
Candlestick Bowling Lanes: None.
Pocket Billiard Tables: N/A.
Amusement Rides: None.
Driving Range Slots: None.
Miniature Golf Course: None.
Arcade: (Number unknown)
Skee-Ball: N/A.
Fascination: None.
Restaurant: None.
Cocktail lounge: None.
Laser Tag: None.
Bounce Houses: None.
Bumper Cars: None.
Go-Kart: None.
Motel: None.
Swimming Pool: None.
Jungle Gym Playground: None.
Skate Park: None.
Operated: (Overall)-- 27 June 1973 to 01 October 2005.
America On Wheels Eatontown: 27 June 1973 to 1988.
Eatontown Roller Rink: 1988 to 01 October 2005.
Reason for Closure:
America On Wheels Eatontown: Richard Jones was manager bought out interest completely from AOW.
Eatontown Roller Rink: Personal decision to close. Although Richard Jones, the owner sold it about 2 years prior to an Ocean Township investment group but unless the town finds something to replace the roller rink. (This is according to Richard Jones).
Wanted: Information regarding exact dates of open/closed, why closed, size of rink, rink materials. Also photos/articles. Anyone knows or have photos, please let me know by emailing at [email protected]. Thank you. You can also use this form.
Sources:
Web Urbanist
Tiny Naylor's-Sunset Boulevard
Map Google
YouTube
Only in Your State
Email - Richard Jones (manager and Operator). he asked me to add email here: [email protected]. You can reach him.
Yelp - reported closed.
Central Jersey - News in 2005 saying they were still operational.
NJ newspaper - Reported roof collapsed.
Date of issue: 2019.
Updated: 2021.
Updated: 03 July 2022.
Updated: 09 July 2022. (correct spelling).
Updated: 24 September 2022. (added email address).
For office use only: 7.
Worth to visit:
None, as it is all demolished. Nothing to see but see next door if it is still a Googie style building.
DISCLAIMER:
International Roller Skating Rinks History Foundation© (formerly known as Dead-Rinks) and Mark Falso are not responsible for your physical and legal injuries you may have caused. We do not endorse such illegal activities including breaking and entry of former rinks, malls, abandoned buildings, etc. Please always obey laws and regulations and property owner's signs. Some states allow purple paint on fence which means they even have guns on their property and have rights to shoot you. Please DO NOT attempt to enter property without permission!
For abandoned rinks, after you receive permission, do WEAR safety OSHA equipment including a safety glasses, pair of safety gloves, an orange vest or a jacket, and a construction helmet.
Thank you for understanding.
Dead Rinks is now International Roller Skating Rinks History Foundation© because many former names have become new names at the same rinks that are still active and due to much confusion, We have decided that International Roller Skating Rinks History Foundation© fits better for all rinks including defunct, closed, inactive, rebooted, and rinks that are still active today. For short on this site, it is International Roller Skating Rinks History© Bear with us as we change the entire site page by page each day. Thank you for understanding.
Second of all: The contents including words and photos above on this page and/or on any pages are purely educational entertainment purposes only. I provide what information from other websites, skaters, and operators and it may end up with different results between two (or more) sources. It is not our responsible for errors we caused. All sources are shown on each page. All opinions and statements of mine are also stated and are for purely educational entertainment only.
Rinks that are closed are considered dead. Rinks that are/were sold and with new management names new name(s), the former are considered dead. Previous operating rink that closed but came back years later, are considered dead because the reopening is considered rebooted, nothing to do with the former. Since we are rebooted to allow alive rinks, active rinks, we welcome those active rinks as well. It will be described.
As for “For Office Only” is for my reasoning and private legal reason for that.
Any music associated with any YouTube or any other videos provided on International Roller Skating Rinks History Foundation© are not the property of International Commercial Archeology Preservation© Group and/or International Roller Skating Rinks History Foundation© therefore we do not own the rights to the music.
All photos you submitted or we retrieved become property of International Roller Skating Rinks History Foundation© and are watermarked but they are credited to you (or where the source is from). Thank you for understanding. To understand more about this, please go to this page: Disclaimer.
© Copyrighted by International Roller Skating Rinks History Foundation©, an International Commercial Archeology Preservation© Group. All Rights Reserved. Jn 3:3 to 16. Deut. 32:7.