Sections
  • DC's Most Influential
  • News & Politics
    • Washingtonian Today
  • Things to Do
    • DC Welcome Guide
    • This Week
    • 100 Best Things to Do in DC
    • Neighborhood Guides
    • DC-Area Events Calender
    • Washingtonian Events
  • Food & Drink
    • 100 Very Best Restaurants
    • The Hot List
    • Brunch
    • New Restaurants
    • Restaurant Finder
  • Home & Style
    • Health
    • Parenting
  • Shopping
    • Gift Guides
  • Real Estate
    • Top Realtors
    • Listings We Love
    • Rave Worthy Rentals
  • Weddings
    • Real Weddings
    • Wedding Vendor Finder
    • Submit Your Wedding
  • Travel
    • DC Welcome Guide
    • Best Airbnbs Around DC
    • 3 Days in DC
  • Best of DC
    • Doctors
    • Apartment Rentals
    • Dentists
    • Financial Advisors
    • Industry Leaders
    • Lawyers
    • Mortgage Pros
    • Pet Care
    • Private Schools
    • Realtors
    • Wedding Vendors
  • Magazine
    • Subscribe
    • Manage Subscription
    • Current & Past Issues
    • Features and Longreads
    • Newsletters
    • Newsstand Locations
Reader Favorites
  • 100 Very Best Restaurants
  • DC-Area Events Calendar
  • Brunch
  • Neighborhoods
  • Newsletters
  • Directories
  • Washingtonian Events
Washington’s Best
  • Apartment Rentals
  • DC Travel Guide
  • Dentists
  • Doctors
  • Financial Advisers
  • Health Experts
  • Home Improvement Experts
  • Industry Leaders
  • Lawyers
  • Mortgage Professionals
  • Pet Care
  • Private Schools
  • Real Estate Agents
  • Restaurants
  • Retirement Communities
  • Wedding Vendors
Privacy Policy |  Rss
© 2025 Washingtonian Media Inc.
All Rights Reserved
Skip to content
Washingtonian.com
  • Search
  • Subscribe
  • Menu
Washingtonian.com
  • Subscribe
Reader Favorites
  • 100 Very Best Restaurants
  • DC-Area Events Calendar
  • Brunch
  • Neighborhoods
  • Newsletters
  • Directories
  • Washingtonian Events
More
  • Subscribe
  • Manage My Subscription
  • Digital Edition
  • Shop
  • Contests
  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • Jobs
Sections
  • News & Politics
  • Food
  • Things to Do
  • Washingtonian Events
  • Home & Style
  • Editors’ Picks
  • Events Calendar
  • Health
  • Longreads
  • Parenting
  • Real Estate
  • Shopping
  • Travel
  • Weddings
  • DC's Most Influential
  • News & Politics
    • Washingtonian Today
  • Things to Do
    • DC Welcome Guide
    • This Week
    • 100 Best Things to Do in DC
    • Neighborhood Guides
    • DC-Area Events Calender
    • Washingtonian Events
  • Food & Drink
    • 100 Very Best Restaurants
    • The Hot List
    • Brunch
    • New Restaurants
    • Restaurant Finder
  • Home & Style
    • Health
    • Parenting
  • Shopping
    • Gift Guides
  • Real Estate
    • Top Realtors
    • Listings We Love
    • Rave Worthy Rentals
  • Weddings
    • Real Weddings
    • Wedding Vendor Finder
    • Submit Your Wedding
  • Travel
    • DC Welcome Guide
    • Best Airbnbs Around DC
    • 3 Days in DC
  • Best of DC
    • Doctors
    • Apartment Rentals
    • Dentists
    • Financial Advisors
    • Industry Leaders
    • Lawyers
    • Mortgage Pros
    • Pet Care
    • Private Schools
    • Realtors
    • Wedding Vendors
  • Magazine
    • Subscribe
    • Manage Subscription
    • Current & Past Issues
    • Features and Longreads
    • Newsletters
    • Newsstand Locations
News & Politics  |  Things to Do

How the National Gallery Builds Its Sculpture Garden Ice Rink

No, it doesn't just lay out a hose and call it a day.

Written by Jessica Ruf
| Published on November 14, 2023
Tweet Share
National Gallery of Art Ice Rink
Photograph by Evy Mages .

The National Gallery is nearly ready to reopen its outdoor skating rink inside its sculpture garden next week. It needs just one last thing: the ice.

While it might seem like a simple thing to make—just flood the rink and wait for it to freeze—the process is quite a bit more involved than that. “There’s a lot of nuance in it that can really only be learned through experience,” said the rink’s manager and head “ice man,” Alex Binsted, who’s been overseeing the process for the past few years.

This week, he’ll begin the process once again, working with his team in the overnight hours to build the rink, which has existed in its current form since 1999 when the sculpture garden first opened. However, skaters had been gliding on an older rink at the site since 1974. In the early ’80s, Smithsonian employees even formed their own skate clubs and would take to the ice during breaks. In other words, skating among the museums and monuments is a long-held tradition (as far back as the 19th century, according to the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media).


Related
Ice Skating Returns to the National Gallery’s Sculpture Garden on November 20

People have been ice skating outside the National Gallery since the 1970s. Pictured here: four skaters and a terrifying clown. Photograph courtesy of National Gallery of Art Archives.

Binsted walked us through the process of what’s involved in ensuring the tradition continues. Should all go according to plan, the National Gallery’s picturesque rink will reopen on Monday. But first, here’s how the ice gets made:

1. Drain the garden’s fountain and prep what’s underneath.

You may have wondered how the gallery’s rink has been able to stay open on sunny, 50+ degree days. The secret lays beneath the water fountain. Built into the fountain’s concrete base is a refrigeration unit made up of large pipes that the gallery fills with glycol and keeps cold with Freon refrigerants. Thanks to that system, skaters can safely use the ice in temperatures up to 60 degrees, according to the gallery.

2. Wait for the right weather.

Once the fountain is drained, the pipes filled, and all the other temporary infrastructure built—such as the ice rink’s sheds and lockers—it’s time to wait for a forecast of ice-building weather. That is, little wind, cool temperatures, and no rain or snow. “You really want favorable weather for it,” says Binsted. “Unfortunately, nowadays, November is barely bordering on wintertime, so getting a good week is harder and harder.”

3. Roll out the paper!

The glistening ice isn’t naturally white. Instead, what gives the rink its snowy hue are layers upon layers of thin white paper at its base. Without it, the ice would be a dismal gray, since that’s the color of the concrete foundation beneath it. (FYI, indoor rinks aren’t naturally white either. Their floors are usually painted.) But aside from giving the ice its pretty, wintry sheen, the paper does serve another function: It reflects sunlight off the rink. “The refrigeration system alone isn’t enough to keep a solid sheet of ice that people can skate on,” says Binsted. “We need the white paper to reflect the sun and keep some of the heat off there.” 

Laying the paper takes multiple people working together at once: someone to unroll the heavy, 40 inch x 1,875 foot rolls of paper (altogether, they use ten rolls); another person to mist water onto the paper, which “glues” it to the ground; several people with foam rollers to squeegee any air bubbles out of each layer; and another person to pick up leaves or other debris that fall onto the rink. 

4. Tread very carefully.

For the first few layers of paper and water, Binsted and his team are, quite literally, walking on thin ice. “If you twist the ball your foot or something, that’s a good way to get the paper torn up,” says Binsted. “Whoever does that is instantly heckled—in a nice way, of course.”

Altogether, the process of laying and spraying down the paper, which they do late at night when it’s cooler outside, takes six to eight hours of patient treading. “You got to start with a good base,” said Binsted. “Without that you’re just going to have trouble maintaining good ice throughout the season.”

Alex Binsted (second from right) and his team. Photograph by Evy Mages .

5. Spray on hot (yes, hot) water. 

Once you have a solid base of paper and ice, it’s time to spray on the water. While it might seem counterintuitive, Binsted’s team uses hot water, usually between 140 and 170 degrees, to build the ice (and also when maintaining it via Zamboni throughout the season). That way, the heat from each new layer will melt any ridges and fill in any existing cracks from the previous layer before freezing again. “It forms a more dense sheet of ice because of that,” said Binsted.

Because the Zamboni is too heavy to get on the ice yet, they do this step by hand, patiently following a grid pattern while another person keeps the warm hose moving so it doesn’t melt the ice it’s laying on. Altogether, it usually takes Binsted’s team a minimum of four days to spray on the ice, layer by layer. 

6. Find the sweet spot.

The thickness of the ice is pretty critical, says Binsted. Too thin, and it can’t hold a Zamboni. Too thick, and the refrigeration system beneath the rink has to work too hard. “Between our refrigeration system and DC temperatures, we’ve found our sweet spot,” says Binsted. That sweet spot is surprisingly thin—between .75 and 1 inch thick.

7. Sculpt the ice.

Snowy weather doesn’t mean a snow day for Binsted. Because rain and snow can create uneven, pockmarked ice, Binsted’s team must “sculpt” or remove any new layers with the rink’s Zamboni, which can remove only 1/16 of an inch of ice at a time. That means that an inch of rain requires roughly 16 passes on the Zamboni to get the ice back to normal. It also means that during particularly rough snow storms in the past, staff have even stayed overnight to get the ice back in shape for skaters the next day. 

Then of course, there’s the daily maintenance of smoothing out the ice. Over the course of an average season, Binsted and his team drive the Zamboni around the ice about 1,300 times, according to the gallery. Because of that, you might just call them the ice sculpturists of the sculpture garden.

Photograph courtesy of the National Gallery of Art.

More: ice skatingNational Gallery of ArtWinter
Join the conversation!
Share Tweet
Jessica Ruf
Jessica Ruf
Assistant Editor

Most Popular in News & Politics

1

Washington DC’s 500 Most Influential People of 2025

2

Stumpy Stans Can Now Preorder a Bobblehead of the Beloved Tree

3

Johnson Says Congress Will Fix DC’s Budget Eventually, Pete Hegseth Used Signal More Than We Thought, and Locals Won Pulitzers

4

Slugging Makes a Comeback for DC Area Commuters

5

Trump Fires Librarian of Congress, Fox News Host to Be Next Top DC Prosecutor, Possibly Rabid Actual Fox Terrorizes Arlington

Washingtonian Magazine

May Issue: 52 Perfect Saturdays

May Issue: 52 Perfect Saturdays

View Issue
Subscribe

Follow Us on Social

We'll help you live your best #DCLIFE every day

Follow Us on Social

We'll help you live your best #DCLIFE every day

Related

DC’s Jazz in the Garden Returns With Seven Concerts This Summer

Spend time in a tiny home near Shenandoah. Photo courtesy of Postcard Cabins.

5 Winter Getaways a Drive Away From DC

The 7 Best Places to Ski Near DC

Ice Skating Returns to the National Gallery’s Sculpture Garden This Weekend

More from News & Politics

This Pop-Up Museum Is All About the Teenage Experience

Jeanine Pirro: 5 Things to Know About the Fox News Host Trump Picked to Be DC’s Top Prosecutor

Trump Fires Librarian of Congress, Fox News Host to Be Next Top DC Prosecutor, Possibly Rabid Actual Fox Terrorizes Arlington

9 Embassies to Check Out During the EU Open Houses This Weekend

Trump Yanks Ed Martin’s Nomination

“Les Miz” Castmembers Plan Boycott of Trump Appearance, Ed Martin Wants to Jail a Guy for Trespassing on Federal Property, and We Found Some Swell Turkish Food

DC Might Be Getting a Watergate Museum

The Ultimate Guide on How to Date in DC

© 2025 Washingtonian Media Inc.
All Rights Reserved.
Washingtonian is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com.
Privacy Policy and Opt-Out
 Rss
Get the best news, delivered weekly.
By signing up, you agree to our terms.
  • Subscribe
  • Manage My Subscription
  • Digital Edition
  • Shop
  • Contests
  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • Jobs