Aloha Roller Palace 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA. This was a 1978 photo showing the original mural of sort of sunset period at the beach. Tropical trees, beach, the waves, and a sailboat in the middle. This version is different than the Rebooted Aloha which was more of blue-themed colors with greens. I love the architectural style on the wall. It is a very late period of Tiki Google Architectural style. Burnt Yellow, Burnt Red, Burnt Orange.. 1970s colors. Source: "Tsunami."
Aloha Roller Palace 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA. This was a 1978 photo showing skaters skate as patrons watched in background. I love the architectural style on the wall. It is a very late period of Tiki Google Architectural style. Burnt Yellow, Burnt Red, Burnt Orange.. 1970s colors. You can notice a Tiki mask on the wall and the Starburst lights on the wall. Very Tiki style. Tsunami told me that her mother was featured in the photo. Would love to know which one. Source: "Tsunami."
Aloha Roller Palace 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA. This was a 1979 photograph Two gorgeous women in the Tuxedo Craze style costumes showing off their pose in the hall. You can see the carpet apparently in Tans and Browns. The other photo I did not pose was a little girl who was standing by the snack bar. The carpet was the same but the wall was more redish and orange. The counter was similar pattern. Very 1970s look. It is a very late period of Tiki Google Architectural style. Burnt Yellow, Burnt Red, Burnt Orange.. 1970s colors. Source: "Tsunami."
Aloha Roller Palace 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA. This was a 1980 show with children skaters while partrons watched in background. I love the architectural style on the wall. It is a very late period of Tiki Google Architectural style. Burnt Yellow, Burnt Red, Burnt Orange.. 1970s colors. Source: "Tsunami."
Roxy's 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA. It was a time when it was Roxy's in 1993. I love that graphic because it does look like markers on paper with tapes to make the word ROXY'S but the R was.. odd. They could have arched the "r" Or use capitalized "R" in it. Source: "Tsunami."
Roxy's 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA. It was a time when it was Roxy's in 1993. I love that graphic because it does look like markers on paper with tapes to make the word ROXY'S but the R was.. odd. They could have arched the "r" Or use capitalized "R" in it. This was not quite a Memphis Group style graphic art. Markers were big at the time. (I still use markers for my designs!) Source: "Tsunami"
Golden State Roller Palace 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA. This was during the time at Golden State Roller Palace. My, a huge group of skaters for a show. I am sure the Rockettes were jealous! Wow, beautiful um.. women skaters! Ok, women, men are handsome there too. Happy now? Hee hee. Source: "Tsunami."
Golden State Roller Palace/Aloha Roller Palace 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA. This shows more updated of the building because of the color turned to Dark Red instead of Dark Teal. Sign remained the same. The colors and theme feel very 80's tropical marine feel. A bit of 1980s Miami feel in California! Source: Way Marketing website.
Golden State Roller Palace/Aloha Roller Palace 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA. This shows more updated of the building because of the color turned to Dark Red instead of Dark Teal. Sign remained the same. The colors and theme feel very 80's tropical marine feel. A bit of 1980s Miami feel in California! Source: Way Marketing website.
Golden State Roller Palace/Aloha Roller Palace 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA. This shows more updated of the building because of the color turned to Dark Red instead of Dark Teal. Sign remained the same. Source: NBC News San Jose.
Golden State Roller Palace/Aloha Roller Palace 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA. Hard to see the background. All blur. This is all I could get on the rest of the rink. I wanted to see what else they had in style. But you can see how shining the rink was. Common Light Blue Urethane coated concrete floor. Looks so Ice-like! Looks like the girl in Lime Green shirt with blue jeans is losing balance. Careful there! Source: Mercury News, a local paper.
Golden State Roller Palace/Aloha Roller Palace 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA. Clear and improving picture. I love the walls! Clean, professional looking, very modern... truly updated look. Looked like 1980s retro in 2010s. Ok, yes, I see her in the picture. She does look a little bit like the girl in the Lime Green shirt in the photo above. Was that her? Maybe not. Source: CBS San Jose.
San Jose Skate 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA. This was the final look of the former rink. In the two Bs-- Blue and Black. Interesting thing though was the pendents remained the same! Source: "Tsunami."
Golden State Roller Palace/Aloha Roller Palace 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA. Mural is great. Love the island and the sea.. the sky.. it is properly pictured because usually tropical region such as South Pacific Rim are quite a bit of cloudy--quite opposite of what movies shown. Now the sign. SVRG.. It looks unmatchable to the tropical scenery mural. I feel that,... no offense, should have not been there. It looks better without the 4 letters. The balance of the mural could have added more tropical on the other side of that mural. Watch some Bob Ross painting and he will tell you on YouTube or on PBS. He was right because I am also a painter and you have to "frame the picture" Source: San Jose Skate/Aloha Skate Center. (rebooted rink).
San Jose Skate 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA. This was during the time at San Jose Skate. A nice close up of the front door. You can see large canopy overhead where the doors were. Very modern lines similar to FLW Prairie design or even Minimalist feel. The Cinderblocks were built as Bond style. That is, stack straight up, not Cascade as most places are built that way. Source: "Tsunami."
Golden State Roller Palace/Aloha Roller Palace 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA. More updated modern colors. Darker. The Dark Red trims the roofline with Tan-ish color. Looks to be late 2000s or early 2010s due to the cars. There are now more trucks on the road than cars as seen in this picture. Source: San Jose Skate/Aloha Skate Center.
Golden State Roller Palace/Aloha Roller Palace 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA. This was taken in 2009. You can see bright colors of its day. Source: Google.
Golden State Roller Palace/Aloha Roller Palace 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA. This was taken in 2017. You can see all new paints. Today, its darker color of the same. Source: Google.
Golden State Roller Palace/Aloha Roller Palace 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA. This was taken in July 2021. Aloha no more. You might guess what Dr. Smith would say, "Oh the humanity! The pains, the pains!" Haha. Demolished to make room for an apartment complex (Seen sign says so in the photo). Source: The Nixon Sisters.
Golden State Roller Palace/Aloha Roller Palace 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA. This was taken in July 2021. Aloha no more. Demolished to make room for an apartment complex (Seen sign says so in the photo above this one). Source: The Nixon Sisters.
Aloha Roller Palace 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA
Roxy's 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA
Golden State Roller Palace 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA
San Jose Skate Rink 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA
Aloha Roller Rink 2190 Eastridge Loop #1402, San Jose, CA (Rebooted, Relocated, ACTIVE)
This was a long time rink that was opened in 1977 as Aloha Roller Palace at 397 Blossom Hill Road in San Jose, California. This rink had a theme, quite clear because of the name, Aloha which is associated with Polynesian Tiki theme. It was a late comer to that theme in 1977 because it was once popular in 1940s and 1950s as part of Polynesian Tiki-Googie Era of American Architecture and interior design of that era.
They changed the name to Golden State Roller Palace sometimes between the 1970s and 2010s. I have no data regarding that happened and likely the ownership changed hands. I do not have all information.
The final rink was named after the town, San Jose Skate Center.
The building was a "big box" structure with flat roof and that 1950-ish look up front with the awning. It featured 3 tone colors for the rink. They changed colors though. Final color was Light and Dark Teal and Snow White.
The interior especially the final rink was common Soft-Blue urethane coated poured Concrete floor layout for the rink. The interior design I could not see well because all I got was 3 interior pictures best suited for here that shows the skaters and the floor. Not the snack bar area, skate rental, lockers, game room, etc. Nothing of that and I have no idea. I would appreciate photos for that.
Now, the rink had mural of course. See photo and description. It has that tropical theme though properly for that region because it is California. The interior was a pleasant look with White globe lights pendants all over the ceilings. The walls had several hues of Blues with Black vertical stripes which supposedly be the Steel Truss.
The reason for closure were several, skating were down at that rink but more prefer ice skating and that popularity is up for ice skating says the current building owner (the rink is now a furniture store). People wanted different taste now. The last owner of the rink was the Health Trust, a non-profit organization that operated the rink.
Clearly with non-profit, it remained difficult to operate in this day compared to the 1980s or even 1970s. Sadly the rink was sold to an investor in January 2014 and it closed up for good on May 31, 2014.
UPDATE --
Today I got an email from a person who used to work at this rink. Here is what she has to say--
Hi there, I noticed you did a post about Aloha Roller Palace / Golden State Roller Palace in San Jose, but weren't sure about the date of the name change. I can vouch that I remember going there as a kid in the early 90s and it was Aloha, and by the time I started working there in 1997, it had recently changed ownership and was called Golden State. I would estimate that the came change occurred around 1995. Hope this helps!
Thank you, M.N. for your information! That helps narrow down on the dates of open/close/changed.
UPDATE! --
Wow, I received a really good detailed email from this wonderful woman who wrote to me this week of end of September 2021. And interesting too. Ami's email are in italic. Here is what she has to say --
Hello!
I came across your site and wanted to commend you on all the work! (Well, thank you so much, Ami! @}---%---- a red rose that is). I am an [A]rchitect and life long roller skater and appreciate the archiving of rinks past and current as they become fewer and fewer. Hopefully with this current wave of pandemic skaters these rinks will be able to survive! (I hope so too, Ami. And wow, you are an architect! I am a Freelance Designer, Artist, and Freelance CAD Drafter. Have you designed a rink, Ami?)
I was looking at your post about Aloha/Golden State Rink in San Jose, CA and thought I could share some fun insight and photos. Sadly, this rink/building was demolished in July of this year (Oh no! I don't like it!). My sister was driving by as it was being bulldozed and sent me some pics on July 21st 2021. (Please do send me photos, OK, Ami?)
My mom was one of the original artistic club members at Aloha in the late 70's and I followed suit and skated from the time I could walk till the day the rink closed - I think I spent more time in that rink growing up than I did anywhere else! Aloha was one of the largest rinks in the Bay Area. (Looks like it was when I read your email and from what I seen when made this profile/article on this rink. I am sure you knew those people in the pictures above. Are you in there? Are you the one with the long black hair and white shirt on? Hee hee! Just kidding!)
When Aloha, it had brown and orange shag carpet walls, Huge Tiki masks and starburst lighting. The Skate guards all wore Hawaiian shirts and flower leis. (Maybe that is where Trader Joe's got the idea from!) The snack bar had this cool red and gold flower patterned carpet and matching linoleum that ran up the wall of the counter. The front landscaping spelled out "Aloha" in flowers - it was amazing! (Wow! Really unique! I love that, Ami! Wish I could have seen this style! Truly 1970s Tropical feel.)
In my teens in the early 90's I was heavily training and competing out of that rink and recall the Aloha name being changed to "Roxy's" (named after the owners Roxy Applebaum and Roxy Sax) for a short period of time before becoming Golden State. I have videos of my partner and I practicing in '93 with the newly painted mural. I recall how devastated we were when they painted over the amazing [P]olynesian mural. In the early 90's, Aloha had one largest number of Artistic skating Champions, National and World teams with Coach Larry Chopp. It was also a popular rink for Rexing (rhythm skating community). By the mid to late 90's, rollerblading and roller hockey seemed to take on the spotlight.
I believe it was '94/95 that the rink was sold and the name was changed to Golden [S]tate (based on photos I have and murals being painted again!) and then onto San Jose Skate (when the perimeter walls were built).
Ami added more the next day--
Hey Mark!
Awwwww, I am so happy to hear you enjoyed and posted the photos! (and yes, that is me at the snack bar :) [Note the photo is not shown due she was a child in there and normally I do not show children's faces due to protection of the welfare of young children a la.. laws and regulations. Anyway] The updates look great! I did a quick screenshot and added our names so you can see which was my mom and myself (see attached). My sister still lives right down the street from where the rink was, she never skated though, she was the softball/tomboy and I was always in tutu's or skates...lol!
FYI: The reboot of the rink is actually called Aloha Roller Rink, located at 2190 Eastridge Loop #1402, San Jose, CA 95122 - it started out as a winter/holiday pop-up in 2018 (if i can recall correctly) at the mall and it did so well they were able to continue the lease. Liz Ruiz, the owner was a manager for the original Aloha Roller Palace.
Wow, what an interesting history and how the names were changed and how the tropical theme was used even staff wore Hawaiian shirts at the time. Sounded like what Trader Joe's would do. Just like that. Maybe Trader Joe's got idea from or other way around? Or just being original? Who knows. I would have loved to skate there and yes Skate with Ami for sure during couple skates. Not couple figure skating since I do not know how to do that part but I only do know how to just hold hands and skate around the rink. And of course, haha, ask her for her number. That is what I am feeling about the place. I would have love that and even get to wear a Hawaiian shirt on. I do have many of them. I love Hawaiian as well as Camp Shirts, Bowling Shirts, Cubavera Shirts, and Guyaberra Shirts and I often wear the but I do not have Barong Shirts though. I am not liking Button Down Shirts with upright collars. No. Anyway, the murals.. the work they have done to make it so tropical is awesome.
The interior section just below is empty because I wanted to know more and what in order of style. Thanks to Ami, all are right there so please read the email again if you want to know what the interior was like. Really cool interior design.
It is nice to hear the reboot made a comeback for Aloha Roller Rink. The rink's new home is in a shopping mall in town called Eastridge Center mall. That is for Fall to Spring then in Summer season, they are held at outdoors at the Roosevelt Park Roller Hockey Rink.
Thank you so much for the photos and info, Ami! Wow, really different interior each time they were in business. Oh man, sad. It is being demolished for a new apartment complex.
Interior:
See Ami's email she send to me and the photos are a 1000 words described. They are truly themed and colorful. Paining over the tropical theme really hurts and they did it again but then they changed again then out of business, then a furniture store. Now demolished as of July 2021. Sad.
Exterior:
The building is a Flat roofed Free-Span Steel Truss Cinderblock built Warehouse-like building. Originally with Miami Sea Blue with White Sand color walls. Then they painted Black over the blue. Then after they closed for good, businesses come and go with different colors throughout the years. The building itself is 32,220 Square Feet built in 1976. When it was sold, it was renovated in 2015.
Rink Size: N/A Floor: Common Soft Blue Urethane coated concrete Floor Layout: Standard
Building Size: 32,220 SF. Built/Renovation: 1976/2015. Demolished: July 2021 - Demolished!
Type of Building: Free Span Cinderblock Building.
Roof: Flat
Acres: 2.0400 AC.
Operated: 1976/1977 to May 31, 2014.
Aloha Roller Palace: c. 1976 to 1993
Roxy's: 1993 to c.1995
Golden State Roller Palace: c. 1995 to N/A
San Jose Skate Rink: N/A to May 31, 2014.
Aloha Roller Rink: (Relocated and rebooted) Fall 2018 to Present.
Reason for Closure: Downturn, operational costs, fewer skaters. New owner felt its best to close up and turn into a furniture store. Health Trust organization does not have much resources to keep up with expenses.
With only exception, the Aloha Roller Rink rebooted and still operational.
Wanted: Information regarding pictures of everything inside of the building, any older photos, rink size, building size.
Sources: Facebook
CBS News
NBC News
Way Marking
M.N. email.
Loop Net. PDF version.
A.F. email.
Ami's photo album. (12 photographs are displayed on each page).
Aloha Roller Rink Rebooted.
Date of issue: early 2019. Updated: 19 August 2021. Updated: 01 October 2021.
For Office Only: 20
© 2019 Dead Rinks. All Rights Reserved.
Roxy's 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA
Golden State Roller Palace 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA
San Jose Skate Rink 397 Blossom Hill Rd, San Jose, CA
Aloha Roller Rink 2190 Eastridge Loop #1402, San Jose, CA (Rebooted, Relocated, ACTIVE)
This was a long time rink that was opened in 1977 as Aloha Roller Palace at 397 Blossom Hill Road in San Jose, California. This rink had a theme, quite clear because of the name, Aloha which is associated with Polynesian Tiki theme. It was a late comer to that theme in 1977 because it was once popular in 1940s and 1950s as part of Polynesian Tiki-Googie Era of American Architecture and interior design of that era.
They changed the name to Golden State Roller Palace sometimes between the 1970s and 2010s. I have no data regarding that happened and likely the ownership changed hands. I do not have all information.
The final rink was named after the town, San Jose Skate Center.
The building was a "big box" structure with flat roof and that 1950-ish look up front with the awning. It featured 3 tone colors for the rink. They changed colors though. Final color was Light and Dark Teal and Snow White.
The interior especially the final rink was common Soft-Blue urethane coated poured Concrete floor layout for the rink. The interior design I could not see well because all I got was 3 interior pictures best suited for here that shows the skaters and the floor. Not the snack bar area, skate rental, lockers, game room, etc. Nothing of that and I have no idea. I would appreciate photos for that.
Now, the rink had mural of course. See photo and description. It has that tropical theme though properly for that region because it is California. The interior was a pleasant look with White globe lights pendants all over the ceilings. The walls had several hues of Blues with Black vertical stripes which supposedly be the Steel Truss.
The reason for closure were several, skating were down at that rink but more prefer ice skating and that popularity is up for ice skating says the current building owner (the rink is now a furniture store). People wanted different taste now. The last owner of the rink was the Health Trust, a non-profit organization that operated the rink.
Clearly with non-profit, it remained difficult to operate in this day compared to the 1980s or even 1970s. Sadly the rink was sold to an investor in January 2014 and it closed up for good on May 31, 2014.
UPDATE --
Today I got an email from a person who used to work at this rink. Here is what she has to say--
Hi there, I noticed you did a post about Aloha Roller Palace / Golden State Roller Palace in San Jose, but weren't sure about the date of the name change. I can vouch that I remember going there as a kid in the early 90s and it was Aloha, and by the time I started working there in 1997, it had recently changed ownership and was called Golden State. I would estimate that the came change occurred around 1995. Hope this helps!
Thank you, M.N. for your information! That helps narrow down on the dates of open/close/changed.
UPDATE! --
Wow, I received a really good detailed email from this wonderful woman who wrote to me this week of end of September 2021. And interesting too. Ami's email are in italic. Here is what she has to say --
Hello!
I came across your site and wanted to commend you on all the work! (Well, thank you so much, Ami! @}---%---- a red rose that is). I am an [A]rchitect and life long roller skater and appreciate the archiving of rinks past and current as they become fewer and fewer. Hopefully with this current wave of pandemic skaters these rinks will be able to survive! (I hope so too, Ami. And wow, you are an architect! I am a Freelance Designer, Artist, and Freelance CAD Drafter. Have you designed a rink, Ami?)
I was looking at your post about Aloha/Golden State Rink in San Jose, CA and thought I could share some fun insight and photos. Sadly, this rink/building was demolished in July of this year (Oh no! I don't like it!). My sister was driving by as it was being bulldozed and sent me some pics on July 21st 2021. (Please do send me photos, OK, Ami?)
My mom was one of the original artistic club members at Aloha in the late 70's and I followed suit and skated from the time I could walk till the day the rink closed - I think I spent more time in that rink growing up than I did anywhere else! Aloha was one of the largest rinks in the Bay Area. (Looks like it was when I read your email and from what I seen when made this profile/article on this rink. I am sure you knew those people in the pictures above. Are you in there? Are you the one with the long black hair and white shirt on? Hee hee! Just kidding!)
When Aloha, it had brown and orange shag carpet walls, Huge Tiki masks and starburst lighting. The Skate guards all wore Hawaiian shirts and flower leis. (Maybe that is where Trader Joe's got the idea from!) The snack bar had this cool red and gold flower patterned carpet and matching linoleum that ran up the wall of the counter. The front landscaping spelled out "Aloha" in flowers - it was amazing! (Wow! Really unique! I love that, Ami! Wish I could have seen this style! Truly 1970s Tropical feel.)
In my teens in the early 90's I was heavily training and competing out of that rink and recall the Aloha name being changed to "Roxy's" (named after the owners Roxy Applebaum and Roxy Sax) for a short period of time before becoming Golden State. I have videos of my partner and I practicing in '93 with the newly painted mural. I recall how devastated we were when they painted over the amazing [P]olynesian mural. In the early 90's, Aloha had one largest number of Artistic skating Champions, National and World teams with Coach Larry Chopp. It was also a popular rink for Rexing (rhythm skating community). By the mid to late 90's, rollerblading and roller hockey seemed to take on the spotlight.
I believe it was '94/95 that the rink was sold and the name was changed to Golden [S]tate (based on photos I have and murals being painted again!) and then onto San Jose Skate (when the perimeter walls were built).
Ami added more the next day--
Hey Mark!
Awwwww, I am so happy to hear you enjoyed and posted the photos! (and yes, that is me at the snack bar :) [Note the photo is not shown due she was a child in there and normally I do not show children's faces due to protection of the welfare of young children a la.. laws and regulations. Anyway] The updates look great! I did a quick screenshot and added our names so you can see which was my mom and myself (see attached). My sister still lives right down the street from where the rink was, she never skated though, she was the softball/tomboy and I was always in tutu's or skates...lol!
FYI: The reboot of the rink is actually called Aloha Roller Rink, located at 2190 Eastridge Loop #1402, San Jose, CA 95122 - it started out as a winter/holiday pop-up in 2018 (if i can recall correctly) at the mall and it did so well they were able to continue the lease. Liz Ruiz, the owner was a manager for the original Aloha Roller Palace.
Wow, what an interesting history and how the names were changed and how the tropical theme was used even staff wore Hawaiian shirts at the time. Sounded like what Trader Joe's would do. Just like that. Maybe Trader Joe's got idea from or other way around? Or just being original? Who knows. I would have loved to skate there and yes Skate with Ami for sure during couple skates. Not couple figure skating since I do not know how to do that part but I only do know how to just hold hands and skate around the rink. And of course, haha, ask her for her number. That is what I am feeling about the place. I would have love that and even get to wear a Hawaiian shirt on. I do have many of them. I love Hawaiian as well as Camp Shirts, Bowling Shirts, Cubavera Shirts, and Guyaberra Shirts and I often wear the but I do not have Barong Shirts though. I am not liking Button Down Shirts with upright collars. No. Anyway, the murals.. the work they have done to make it so tropical is awesome.
The interior section just below is empty because I wanted to know more and what in order of style. Thanks to Ami, all are right there so please read the email again if you want to know what the interior was like. Really cool interior design.
It is nice to hear the reboot made a comeback for Aloha Roller Rink. The rink's new home is in a shopping mall in town called Eastridge Center mall. That is for Fall to Spring then in Summer season, they are held at outdoors at the Roosevelt Park Roller Hockey Rink.
Thank you so much for the photos and info, Ami! Wow, really different interior each time they were in business. Oh man, sad. It is being demolished for a new apartment complex.
Interior:
See Ami's email she send to me and the photos are a 1000 words described. They are truly themed and colorful. Paining over the tropical theme really hurts and they did it again but then they changed again then out of business, then a furniture store. Now demolished as of July 2021. Sad.
Exterior:
The building is a Flat roofed Free-Span Steel Truss Cinderblock built Warehouse-like building. Originally with Miami Sea Blue with White Sand color walls. Then they painted Black over the blue. Then after they closed for good, businesses come and go with different colors throughout the years. The building itself is 32,220 Square Feet built in 1976. When it was sold, it was renovated in 2015.
Rink Size: N/A Floor: Common Soft Blue Urethane coated concrete Floor Layout: Standard
Building Size: 32,220 SF. Built/Renovation: 1976/2015. Demolished: July 2021 - Demolished!
Type of Building: Free Span Cinderblock Building.
Roof: Flat
Acres: 2.0400 AC.
Operated: 1976/1977 to May 31, 2014.
Aloha Roller Palace: c. 1976 to 1993
Roxy's: 1993 to c.1995
Golden State Roller Palace: c. 1995 to N/A
San Jose Skate Rink: N/A to May 31, 2014.
Aloha Roller Rink: (Relocated and rebooted) Fall 2018 to Present.
Reason for Closure: Downturn, operational costs, fewer skaters. New owner felt its best to close up and turn into a furniture store. Health Trust organization does not have much resources to keep up with expenses.
With only exception, the Aloha Roller Rink rebooted and still operational.
Wanted: Information regarding pictures of everything inside of the building, any older photos, rink size, building size.
Sources: Facebook
CBS News
NBC News
Way Marking
M.N. email.
Loop Net. PDF version.
A.F. email.
Ami's photo album. (12 photographs are displayed on each page).
Aloha Roller Rink Rebooted.
Date of issue: early 2019. Updated: 19 August 2021. Updated: 01 October 2021.
For Office Only: 20
© 2019 Dead Rinks. All Rights Reserved.