Ice rink guide
Apex Center Ice Arena

Plan your visit
The essentials before you leave
- Public-skate price
- From $7
- How to book
- Check official calendar
- Rentals
- Available
- Schedule pattern
- Sessions can change
Confirm the current total before paying.
Open the official listing for session requirements.
Check availability and cost.
Confirm the selected date before you make the drive.
Choose your ice
Public skate and practice ice
Public skate is for casual skating and beginner practice. Freestyle is structured practice ice for figure skaters working on elements.
Public skate
Public-skate times change. Open the official schedule and confirm the session before visiting Apex Center Ice Arena.
Freestyle and practice ice
APEX Ice Arena serves Arvada and the northwest Denver suburbs with two sheets and active figure skating and hockey programs.
View freestyle scheduleAbout
Apex Center Ice Arena is an indoor, year-round ice rink in Arvada, CO, operated by Apex Park and Recreation District. It offers public skating, learn to skate, figure skating, hockey, open hockey, and stick and puck across 2 sheets. Check the official site for schedules and pricing.
What to know before you go
- • Apex Center Ice Arena runs on a posted schedule that varies by season; check the official site before you go.
- • Public skating shares the calendar with lessons, hockey, and other ice time, so confirm a public session in advance.
- • Skate rentals are usually available; bring your own skates for the best fit.
- • See the official site for the exact address, directions, and current pricing.
Offerings
Freestyle Sessions
This facility offers dedicated freestyle ice time for figure skaters. Visit apexrec.com/ice or call 720-898-7480 for current freestyle availability.
Who it's for
- • Figure skaters working on jumps, spins, and footwork
- • Competitive and recreational skaters wanting dedicated practice ice
- • Pre-preliminary through senior-level USFS members
Etiquette & Tips
- • Yield to skaters attempting jumps or spins
- • Announce yourself before entering another skater's pattern
- • Coaches must check in at the front desk
- • No hockey stops on freestyle ice
Rentals
- Note: Rentals at the main counter. APEX district resident rates apply.
Sharpening
Frequently Asked Questions
What to expect at Apex Center Ice Arena
Two indoor sheets of ice, open year-round, run by the Apex Park and Recreation District in Arvada on the northwest side of the Denver metro. The ice arena sits inside the larger Apex Center recreation complex, so Apex Center Ice Arena serves recreational skaters, figure skaters, and hockey players while the surrounding building covers a wider range of activities. The two-sheet arena inside a bigger rec center is the frame to hold onto.
The full offerings span both sheets: public skating, learn-to-skate, figure skating and freestyle, hockey, open hockey, and stick and puck. Two surfaces is the structural advantage that lets all of that coexist. A single-sheet rink has to ration its ice, jamming public sessions into narrow gaps between classes and games. Two sheets buys breathing room, so the public calendar does not have to elbow every other program out of the way.
A district-run rink inside a larger recreation complex tends to carry a community-first feel. The mandate is recreation for the surrounding neighborhoods, not just elite training, so on any given day you will find families, beginners, drop-in adults, and serious skaters sharing the building. And because the ice arena is one part of the broader Apex Center, a trip here can fold skating into a wider visit.
Public skating at Apex Center Ice Arena: cost, sessions, and what to know
Public skating is the front door to the ice arena, the session you can walk into with nothing more than a ticket and a pair of rented skates. It is the right first step whether you are testing whether your kid likes the ice or you just want a relaxed hour out of the house.
Public skate times rotate through the week and shift by season, and since the ice arena is only one part of a busy complex, the schedule here carries plenty of moving pieces. The single most useful habit is to pull up the current Apex Center Ice Arena schedule on the official site before you drive over, since a session that was open last month can move when a new program block begins.
Skate rental is available on site, so you do not need to own a pair to start, though a well-fit pair beats rentals if you have your own. Dress in layers you can shed, since the ice arena stays cold even when the rest of the complex is warm, and gloves are close to essential for beginners. Arrive early enough to lace up without rushing on busy weekends, skate with the flow of traffic, and keep the youngest skaters near the rail. For exact pricing and current session times, trust the official site, because rates and the calendar change.
Freestyle and figure skating ice
Figure skaters need what a public session cannot give them: open space and predictable timing to run jumps, spins, and program elements without weaving through casual traffic. Freestyle ice exists for exactly that, and a two-sheet arena is built to provide it.
Apex Center Ice Arena offers figure skating and freestyle sessions as part of its regular ice programming, the dedicated practice time where skaters working toward tests and routines log their reps. With two surfaces, the arena can hold a freestyle session on one sheet while public or hockey programs run on the other, which usually means cleaner, more usable practice ice than a single-sheet building can offer. Freestyle ice is often grouped by skill, so confirm the current session schedule and any level requirements directly with the rink before you go.
Coaching typically runs through independent instructors who work with skaters during these sessions rather than through a single staff appointment, so ask the front desk how lessons are arranged and who is teaching. And because the arena sits inside a larger recreation complex, the rest of the family can use the broader center while one skater practices.
Learn to skate programs
Everyone starts somewhere, and for most people that somewhere is a learn-to-skate class. Coached, leveled instruction turns wobbling at the rail into actual gliding far faster than trying to teach yourself between public sessions.
Apex Center Ice Arena runs learn-to-skate programming as part of its core ice offerings, which means lessons are built into the regular schedule rather than being an occasional add-on. A district-run facility tends to take this seriously, so expect organized levels that move skaters from first steps through solid fundamentals at a steady, encouraging pace. Group classes usually sort students by age and ability, so a five-year-old who has never touched the ice is not lumped in with a teenager refining crossovers.
Classes typically run in defined sessions rather than rolling enrollment, so timing matters. Check the official site for the current learn-to-skate schedule, age ranges, and how to register, then sign up before the block fills. Plan on layers, gloves, and a helmet for younger or newer skaters, and know that skates can be rented. Because the arena sits inside the larger Apex Center, registering for skating can pair naturally with the other activities the complex runs.
Hockey, stick and puck, and open ice
Hockey is where a two-sheet rink really earns its keep. Stick time, scrimmages, and league play eat a lot of ice, and a single sheet can only stretch so far before skaters get crowded out. With two surfaces, Apex Center Ice Arena can run hockey without starving its other programs.
The arena offers hockey along with open hockey and stick-and-puck sessions, the full range that serves players from first-timers to regulars. Stick and puck is the relaxed drop-in window for working on shooting, stickhandling, and skating with the puck at your own pace. Open hockey is the looser pickup format where skaters gather for informal play to stay sharp.
These drop-in sessions almost always carry gear requirements that vary by type. Stick and puck typically calls for at least a helmet, gloves, and a stick, while open hockey often requires fuller protective equipment because the play is faster. Many sessions also sort by skill or age, so confirm the specifics before you go, because showing up underequipped means sitting out. Check the current schedule on the official site, since these windows shift week to week and fill quickly.
Getting there: parking, location, and amenities
Apex Center Ice Arena sits in Arvada, on the northwest side of the Denver metro, within easy reach of the surrounding northwest-suburb neighborhoods and a reasonable drive from much of the broader metro. For the exact street address and turn-by-turn directions, check the official site, since this is a larger building where knowing the right entrance helps.
The big advantage of a recreation complex is what surrounds the ice. Beyond the two sheets, the Apex Center houses a wider range of activities, so a visit can do more than skating. On-site skate rental means you can show up empty-handed, and you will find a lobby or viewing area, restrooms, and standard front-desk services.
A bigger building with steady foot traffic means parking and common areas can fill on busy weekends and during league seasons, so arriving a little early helps you find a spot and settle. Dress for the cold around the ice even if you are only there to watch, because the arena holds its chill regardless of how warm the rest of the complex feels. For exact hours and any building policies, confirm on the official Apex Center Ice Arena site before you head out, since hours shift seasonally and around holidays.
A note for skating parents
The thing that quietly makes a rink work for a family is not just the ice, it is whether the trip fits the whole family and whether you can watch your kid skate without freezing through it. Apex Center Ice Arena has a real edge here, and it comes from being more than a rink.
Because the two ice sheets sit inside the larger Apex Center, a skating trip does not have to strand the rest of the family in a cold lobby for an hour. Siblings who do not skate, or a parent waiting out a lesson, have the broader complex to use. Add the two sheets, which open up more class times, more public sessions, and more hockey windows, and you get real flexibility when you are juggling a kid's schedule against your own.
Plan for the cold around the ice every time. Bundle younger kids in layers, send them with gloves to protect their hands during the inevitable falls, and put a helmet on any beginner or young skater. Bring a warm layer for yourself too if you will be rinkside, because the area around the ice stays cool. A district-run learn-to-skate program is built to turn a nervous first-timer into a confident skater through leveled, coached progression, so trust the process and let the coaches work rather than coaching from the boards. Check the official site for schedules and registration windows before each new block, and the rest, watching your kid find their feet on the ice, takes care of itself.
Facility Details
- TypeIndoor
- Seasonyear-round
- Sheets2
Last verified: 6/26/2026