Sheriff's Airboat Used to Mitigate Ammonia Leak at Ice Arena

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Sheriff's deputies in Anoka County, Minn., were called to Centennial Sports Arena in Circle Pines after its ice surface's refrigeration system broke down, leading to an ammonia leak inside the arena.

As reported by Minneapolis CBS affiliate WCCO, crews from the Spring Lake Park, Blaine, Mounds View Fire Department rushed to the scene, and were presented with a major dilemma: if this didn't get fixed within a few hours, the ice would melt, and ice restoration would take two weeks — creating a major headache for all the local hockey teams that depend on the arena.

"The levels of ammonia in the rink were 400ppm (the safe exposure limit is 35ppm for no longer than 15 minutes)," the sheriff's office wrote in a series of posts on social media.


If all available fans from every local department were brought to the arena, it probably wouldn't be enough to bring those levels down and facilitate restoration of the refrigeration system. Instead, an airboat was brought to the arena from the Anoka County Sherrif's Office, effectively ventilated the building with time to spare. It only took "a few five-minute bursts of air" from the airboat to drop the ammonia level down into a safe zone.

"Thank you Spring Lake Park, Blaine, Mounds View Fire Dept. for keeping the building secure and creatively problem-solving a solution!" the sheriff's department posted.

The 31-year-old arena, the first in the Twin Cities with an Olympic-size ice surface, underwent an $8.5 million renovation in 2019, WCCO's Stephen Swanson reported.

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