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First Posted: 1/5/2013

MINNEAPOLIS — Like many hockey players, the O’Brien brothers like to warm up before games by shooting a few pucks. Unlike most players, they shoot them in their finished basement.

Their mom, Liz O’Brien, doesn’t mind a bit. She and her husband, Mike, turned a lower-level playroom in their Mendota Heights, Minn., home into a synthetic ice rink for their four sons — 10-year-old triplets Mac, Riley and Connor, and 7-year-old Finn.

We surprised ’em with it, right before Christmas, Liz said of the project, completed two seasons ago.

The floor of the windowless room is now a wall-to-wall slick surface where the brothers play two-on-two scrimmages and practice their stick-handling. People come over and can’t believe they’re seeing kids whizzing around in the basement, Liz said.

Minnesota has long been a hotbed of back-yard hockey, but synthetic home rinks are a relatively new phenomenon. Don Mason, president of KwikRink Synthetic Ice, the Maple Grove, Minn., company that supplied the materials for the O’Briens’ rink, has been in business 15 years, mostly outfitting hockey-training centers and other commercial facilities. But residential rinks are a growing part of his business, he said.

Garages and basements are popular places, he said. We’ve also put ’em in a lot of pole barns. In one home, Mason said, we even raised the whole house 2 feet so a tall kid on skates could have a full slapshot in the basement.

The market for in-home synthetic ice is not huge — but very passionate, Mason said. Hockey is such an expensive sport, and a lot of hockey parents want kids to be able to practice at home.

With price tags typically ranging from $2,000 to $8,000, indoor ice can be a significant investment, but so is hockey. Many families regularly shell out thousands of dollars per year for fees, equipment, out-of-town tournaments and off-season training.

With four hockey-playing sons, the O’Briens expect their rink to reduce their overall outlay for the sport. We spend so much on camps and stick-handling clinics, said Mike. As they get bigger and older, we’ll save money on that.

Liz sees value in the recreational benefits of having an in-house rink. We looked at it as a sport court for hockey players, she said. Living in Minnesota and being in the house so many nights a week, we’ve gotten our money out of it. The only downside is I wish it were bigger.

Mike and Katie Magnuson of Sunfish Lake, Minn., put their family’s synthetic rink in a shed that they formerly used for storage. We talked about using (real) ice but this made more sense, Mike said. The kids can use it year-round.

Sons Michael, 12, Danny, 11, and Patrick, 9, skate and shoot in the barn just about every day, Katie said, and sometimes invite their teammates for hockey and pizza parties.

The synthetic surface is a little harder to skate on than real ice, Patrick admitted. You can’t really skate backwards. But the stick-handling feels about the same.

He and his brothers agree that they’ve improved as players since the rink was installed. It helps you develop, said Michael, a goalie. You can come out in the summer anytime you want.

James Dobchuk had both skill development and recreation in mind when he installed a 16-by-30-foot synthetic rink in the lower level of his home in Chanhassen, Minn. For me, it’s a combo platter, he said.

The house had an unfinished basement, and Dobchuk and his wife, Janice, were looking for a way to use the space. Son Toran, now 8, was just starting to play hockey. Daughter Alexa, 11, is a goalie. As a goalie, you can’t just work out in tennis shoes and pads, James said. Their youngest, Tavin, who just turned 3, is now learning to skate in the basement.

Synthetic ice rinks also require some maintenance. The surface must be kept clean; families say they restrict the use of outdoor street shoes on their rinks, to minimize grime. One family vacuums their rink; another rents a floor-scrubber to clean it. In addition, the surface must be sprayed with a lubricating solution every few weeks to keep it slippery.

Artificial ice also takes a toll on skate blades. Most families have their skaters wear their older pond skates on the synthetic rink, and save their game skates for actual ice. Otherwise, we’d be sharpening all the time, Janice Dobchuk said.

Alexa likes their indoor rink because it gives her a place to practice shooting without having to wear her goalie equipment. It gets hot with all the gear, she said.

Her little brother Toran’s verdict: It’s awesome! I can skate, shoot, do a lot of hockey stuff. You don’t have to go to open skate, and you don’t have to pay for this.

Well, somebody did, his mom said with a laugh.