
Ice rinks are humidity battlegrounds. We engineer the desiccant systems that protect the ice, the building, and the experience.
Talk to an engineerIce rinks create extreme humidity challenges. The large ice surface acts as a massive cold sink, drawing moisture from the surrounding air. The result: fog over the ice, condensation on every surface, and long-term structural damage from persistent moisture exposure.
Condensation drips from ceilings and structural steel. Fog reduces visibility for skaters and spectators. Corrosion attacks the building structure. Standard HVAC can't keep up.
The combination of large ice surface area, high occupancy loads, and frequent door openings makes ice rinks one of the most demanding dehumidification applications.
Our systems manage the massive latent load generated by the ice surface while maintaining comfortable conditions for occupants.
We work with arena and facility designers to integrate humidity control into the building design from the start; the most cost-effective and reliable approach.
Drier air above the ice also reduces the refrigeration load on the ice plant itself, meaning lower operating costs and longer equipment life beyond just the dehumidification benefit.
Eliminating fog over the ice surface and condensation on building surfaces.
Preventing long-term corrosion and moisture damage to building structure and systems.
2026
An ice rink without a dehumidifier has fog over the ice, condensation dripping onto skaters, and corrosion eating the roof structure. Dew point control solves all three, and desiccant dehumidification is the only technology that can hold dew point in an arena environment.... Read more
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