Clark Park ice hockey program
Clark Park's outdoor ice hockey program has served as a foundational element for hockey accessibility in Detroit for decades, particularly for youth in the southwest Detroit community. Originally a hub for neighborhood skating, the rink evolved into a focal point for hockey development, community building, and the preservation of a working-class Detroit tradition. It's the last outdoor rink of its kind still operating within city limits. A 34-minute documentary released in 2017 details the program's history and its impact on the city.[1]
History
Clark Park's outdoor rink didn't start as an organized hockey facility. It grew organically out of Detroit's broader hockey culture, functioning for years as an informal gathering space where neighborhood kids could skate without fees, league sign-ups, or equipment requirements. By 1992, every other outdoor ice rink within Detroit's city limits had closed, leaving Clark Park as the sole survivor.[2] That fact alarmed local residents enough to act. A coalition of community members formed specifically to restore the rink and keep it running, an effort that became the foundation of the Clark Park Coalition, the nonprofit organization that continues to operate the program today.
The rink gained national visibility when it was featured in HBO's 24/7: Road to the Winter Classic series, which aired in 2013 ahead of the NHL's 2014 Winter Classic between the Detroit Red Wings and the Toronto Maple Leafs. The series brought significant attention to Clark Park's place in Detroit hockey culture. The NHL used the exposure as an opportunity to invest in the rink's physical infrastructure, providing assistance with a new Zamboni, replacement boards, and dasher glass.[3] That kind of high-profile support helped legitimize the Coalition's work and brought in new donors and volunteers.
The ongoing maintenance and operation of the rink rely heavily on community fundraising. One recurring event, the Frozen Fish Fiasco, raises money specifically to benefit the Clark Park Coalition and keep the ice operational through the winter season.[4] In 2017, Fox 2 News investigative reporter M.L. Elrick and criminal defense attorney Mike Rataj proposed a charity hockey game, the Clark Park Outdoor Classic, as another fundraising vehicle for the rink.[5] These events reflect a broader pattern in which the rink's survival has depended not on public funding alone, but on sustained investment from individuals who grew up around the park or care about its mission.
As of early 2025, the Clark Park Coalition continues to operate the rink through volunteer labor and private donations, maintaining free or low-cost access for youth participants in the southwest Detroit area.[6]
Programs and Youth Development
The Clark Park Coalition runs structured youth hockey programming aimed at making the sport accessible to kids who wouldn't otherwise have the opportunity to play. Hockey is expensive. Equipment, ice time, and league fees push the sport out of reach for many families in lower-income urban neighborhoods, and southwest Detroit is no exception. Clark Park addresses that directly by offering programming that doesn't require players to arrive fully equipped or financially prepared.
The program serves children across a range of ages and skill levels, from beginners learning to skate for the first time to more experienced players developing competitive skills. The rink's open and inclusive approach has allowed it to serve a predominantly Latino community in the Mexicantown and southwest Detroit neighborhoods, a demographic not typically associated with hockey in the national imagination. That's part of what makes the program notable. It doesn't fit the standard profile of a youth hockey operation, and that's intentional.
Participants who go through the program often stay connected to Clark Park well into adulthood. Benavides, who grew up skating and playing hockey at the rink, remained involved with the park after attending Western International High School, returning to give back to the same program that shaped his own development.[7] That kind of continuity, players becoming coaches and volunteers, is central to how the program sustains itself.
Culture
Clark Park's hockey program represents something specific to Detroit's identity as a hockey city. The rink isn't affiliated with a professional team or a suburban recreation department. It's a neighborhood rink, maintained by neighborhood people, in a part of the city that's often overlooked in broader conversations about Detroit's sports culture. For many of the kids who skate there, it's their only exposure to the sport. No indoor facility nearby, no travel team option, no other path in.
The program builds confidence on and off the ice, according to participants and observers who've followed it over the years.[8] It also functions as a community anchor in winter months when public outdoor spaces are often underused. The rink draws skaters and families to the park regularly from December through February, creating a seasonal gathering point that doesn't exist anywhere else in the city.
The outdoor setting carries its own cultural weight. Playing hockey outside, on a rink flooded and maintained by hand in freezing temperatures, connects the program to an older version of the sport, one that existed before climate-controlled arenas and $500 registration fees. That connection to hockey's roots is something the Clark Park Coalition has deliberately preserved, even as the program has grown and attracted outside support.
Geography
Clark Park sits in southwest Detroit, in the heart of the Mexicantown neighborhood, one of the city's most densely populated and historically significant Latino communities. The park functions as a central recreational space year-round, but the outdoor ice rink transforms it seasonally into something distinct from any other facility in the city. Detroit's climate makes natural ice possible for a substantial portion of the winter, and the rink takes full advantage of that window.
The park's location within a walkable urban neighborhood is part of what makes it work. Kids don't need a parent with a car and a flexible schedule to get there. The rink is embedded in the community it serves, not separated from it by distance or access barriers. That geographic reality shapes everything about the program, from who participates to how the Coalition recruits volunteers and raises money.
No comparable outdoor hockey facility exists within Detroit's city limits. Clark Park isn't one option among several. It's the only one. That fact gives it an outsized importance in Detroit's hockey landscape and explains why the Clark Park Coalition's fundraising and advocacy work draws attention from national media, the NHL, and hockey supporters well beyond the southwest Detroit neighborhood.