St. Moritz Ice Rink
The St. Moritz Ice Rink was a popular ice rink housed in a grand venue on The Esplanade, St. Kilda, Victoria, which operated between 1939–1981. As one of only two ice rinks in Melbourne in the 40s and 50s, it played a central role to the sport of ice hockey in Australia. Closed in 1982, it soon suffered a major fire and was then demolished, an event later seen as a major blow to the heritage of St Kilda.
St. Moritz Ice Rink circa 1939–1944 | |
Location | 16 The Esplanade, St. Kilda, Victoria |
---|---|
Capacity | 750 |
Opened | March 10, 1939[1] |
History
The St. Moritz was first built as the Wattle Path Palais de Danse in 1922, a very large dance hall, designed by architects Beaver & Purnell.[2][3][4] Located on the Upper Esplanade in St Kilda, it was part of the transformation in the early 20th century of the foreshore area from a row of mansions facing a beach, into a playground for the masses. The Wattle Path was the venue for the first all-Australian dance championship, and featured some of the best dance bands of Australia, as well as from America. Popular throughout the 1920s, it suffered due to the Great Depression, and closed in the early 1930s. In 1933, the building became a film studio, Efftee Studios, for Frank W. Thring,[5] who made some of his half-dozen movies in the cavernous building before moving the project to Sydney in 1936.
In 1938, businessman Henry Hans "Harry" Kleiner announced a project to transform the Wattle Path to an ice rink, and the St. Moritz was born.[6]
The grand opening of the St. Moritz Ice-skating Palais was on Friday 10 March 1939. The arrival of celebrities to the opening was announced on the radio station 3XY and commentary about the interior and events was provided by Norman Banks of the radio station 3KZ. The cost of entry to the official opening of the St. Moritz Ice Rink was 5 shillings, which was inclusive of tax as well as skate hire for the night for over 2000 people that attended.[7] The St. Kilda mayor, Councillor E. C. Mitty, formally opened the new ice skating rink.[8]
Harry Kleiner was sole proprietor until 1953, when he sold the business to J. Gordon and T. Molony, both champion skaters.[9]
The St. Moritz rink operated for over forty years, but in the 1970s trade declined in the face of competition from newer venues in the suburbs as well as roller skating and discotheques. In 1980 it was sold to developers Hudson Conway and trucking magnate Lindsay Fox (who had grown up in St Kilda and played ice hockey in the venue), but continued to operate, closing suddenly in early 1982, amid fears for its future. It was then nominated to the Historic Buildings Preservation Council, but a majority of City of St Kilda councillors voted to oppose this action and uphold a demolition permit already issued. The building infamously suffered a fire later that year, leaving only the facades, which were demolished soon after.[10] The site remained vacant until about 1991, when a mid-price hotel was constructed called the St Moritz, which dropped the reference in 1993 become just the Novotel St Kilda.[11]
Two neon signs of skating girls were rescued from the facade by local identity Tom Ingram, one of which was re-erected within the cafe of the hotel, then covered over, rediscovered in 2005, and then donated to the St Kilda Historical Society.[12] In 2018 the 'Skating Girl' was donated to the city of Port Phillip, restored and erected within the St Kilda Town Hall.[13]
The hotel closed in 2019 to be replaced by a luxury apartment development.[14]
Ice hockey
The Australian prime minister at the time, Robert Menzies, advised that, despite the declaration of war, sport should go on, and the Victorian Ice Hockey Association made the decision to continue ice hockey with inter-rink competitions between the Melbourne Glaciarium and St. Moritz Ice Rink teams. The St. Moritz Bombers won the first 3 games. There was also inter-team competition between the Rhodes Motor Co. Topliners and Foy's Gibsonia Fliers.[15]
August 1946
A highlight moment for inter-state ice hockey happened during the annual tournament, where Victoria and New South Wales faced each other for the Goodall Cup in a best-of-three style tournament. The series ended with a tie, making this the second time that the Goodall Cup was not awarded to a winning team, rather it was retained by the previous years champion team. This series also saw a record attendance of 5000 spectators for the final game of the series.[16]
5 August 1946 was the second game in the inter state series between New South Wales and Victoria, where Victoria defeated New South Wales 2-1[17]
The goals were scored by[16]
New South Wales – Thorpe ; Victoria – Nichol, Massina
7 August 1946 was the third game of the interstate ice hockey series for the Goodall Cup between Victoria and New South Wales held at the St. Moritz Ice Rink. The night saw a record crowd of 5000 spectators fill the venue to watch the thrilling final end in a 2-2 tie.[16]
The goals were scored by[16]
New South Wales – Jim Brown, F. Terger ; Victoria – Nichol (2)
The proprietors of the St. Moritz rink granted ice time to the Victorian Ice Hockey Association, free of charge to run a Lightning premiership for 8 B grade teams on 9 July 1954. All proceeds for the matches would go to the hockey association for the betterment and growth of the sport in Victoria.[18]
See also
References
- "St. MORITZ ICE RINK OPENING AT St. KILDA". The Herald (19, 284). Victoria, Australia. 8 March 1939. p. 14. Retrieved 11 May 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
- "NEW DANCING PALAIS FOR ST. KILDA". The Herald (14, 714). Victoria, Australia. 16 May 1923. p. 14. Retrieved 11 May 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
- Wattle Path Palais de Danse & Café Ltd (1922), Wattle Path Palais de Danse & Café Ltd: Esplanade St. Kilda, Renwick Pride (printer), retrieved 11 May 2018
- "Advertising". The Herald (14, 491). Victoria, Australia. 26 August 1922. p. 16. Retrieved 11 May 2018 – via National Library of Australia. ...Abridged prospectus of the Wattle Path Palais de Danse and Cafe Limited...
- "Making Films at St. Kilda". The Argus. Melbourne. 29 December 1933. p. 6. Retrieved 15 December 2015 – via National Library of Australia.
- Carpenter, Ross (2013). "The house that Harry built 1932-81". Legends of Australian Ice.
- "It Opens To-night the Worlds Most Beautiful Ice Rink – the "St. Moritz"". The Argus. 10 March 1939. Retrieved 26 September 2015.
- "Ice Skating at St. Kilda. St. Moritz Opened". The Argus. 11 March 1939. Retrieved 26 September 2015.
- "Skating Rink Changes Hands". The Age. Melbourne. 4 March 1953. p. 6. Retrieved 15 December 2015 – via National Library of Australia.
- Longmire, Anne (1989). St. Kilda : The Show Goes On : The History of St. Kilda. City of St Kilda. ISBN 0949873268.
- "St Moritz – The Skating Lady" (PDF). St Kilda Historical Society Newsletter (Issue No 218). May 2016.
- "She lit up lives, but Skating Girl was all ice". The Age. 27 March 2009. Retrieved 21 July 2017.
- "Skating Girl's new home at St Kilda Town Hall" (PDF). St Kilda Historical Society.
- "Just six apartments left as Gurner secures $480 million in sales at Saint Moritz". www.propertyobserver.com.au. Retrieved 18 August 2019.
- "Ice Hockey Games". Sporting Globe. 19 June 1940. Retrieved 22 October 2015.
- "5,000 See Ice Hockey Match". The Argus. 8 August 1946. Retrieved 26 September 2015.
- "Victoria Defeat N S W At Ice Hockey". The Argus. 6 August 1946. Retrieved 26 September 2015.
- "Lightning Title". The Argus. 5 July 1954. Retrieved 27 April 2016.