Royal


Cornwall Royals

Arena Name: Cornwall Civic Complex, Ed Lumley Arena
Capacity: 3,991
Built: 1976
Last Game: 1992
Address: 100 Water St. East, Cornwall, Ontario, K6H 6G4
Ice Surface Size: Regulation
Official Web Site: http://www.cornwallciviccomplex.com
Google Satellite: Click Here

QMJHL
Cornwall Civic Complex
Cornwall Recreation Complex
What was the Arena Like?
The Cornwall Civic Complex is a municipally-owned building built on parkland beside the St Lawrence River. It's built of concrete and dark brown aluminum siding and is dark and uninviting from the outside. When I was there the city was working on adding an addition to the building which would include a new swimming pool. There are also meeting rooms and a convention hall in the building.

Inside things improve greatly. Along the main entrance hall, there is a Royals history display along one wall. Once entering the Ed Lumley Arena you find yourself in a concrete hallway with windows running along the outer wall, and the rise of the grandstand appearing over your head. Surprisingly, the grandstand does not extend to the ceiling of the building so if you had, say, a jetpack, you could jump from the concourse directly over the top of the grandstand and land in the last row of seats. There is a large mural of the Memorial Cup and the Royals' logo painted on the wall when you enter the arena, and there are also murals of Cornwall sports heroes including former Royals Doug Gilmour and Dale Hawerchuk.

The doorways that lead out into the seating bowl are actually that - doorways, with doors that shut. You have to open the door to enter, but once you do, you find yourself in a brightly lit arena done in primary colours. There are four grandstands but no corner seating, and as a result the building has the atmosphere of a British football ground or something similar, where the four stands are separate entities.

The seats are blue and the aisles red, with yellow on the ceiling. The scoreclock is relatively new and functional. The rows do not extend downwards to the ice level, and as a result there is a large, unused area running around the outside of the arena floor. I'm told the locals used to refer to it as "the moat".

The Cornwall Civic Complex is a building constructed during the form-follows-function 1970's and is utilitarian without being beautiful; but it also has its charms. It was great to see Royal history on display. Furthermore, the unusual design makes the arena stand out among Ontario buildings. The building could easily host the OHL or the QMJHL if junior hockey ever made a return to Ontario's easternmost city, and while the Complex is not a perfect building, it is finer than many currently in use in today's OHL.

Eric Cardinal says: Most people from Cornwall usually just refer to the arena as the Complex or the Civic Complex. The arena itself would not be considered an "old barn". It was constructed with a simple design that has aged well and would still be suitable to house a team to this day. Its seating and concession areas are a balanced rectangle shape of grey concrete and windows that face the St-Lawrence River. The ceiling of the arena itself has a very plain scoreboard amongst exposed metal rafters painted yellow. One major problem for the fans is that the seating doesn't go to the ice surface level. It stops at the bowl that would normally go straight to the glass. There is a 6 to 7 foot drop to floor level that is reserved for security, the players and wheelchairs. This design gives everyone a birds-eye-view of the ice, but fans feel distanced from the action.

Like most arenas, the teams would emerge from dressing rooms on the east side of the rink on opposite poles of the surface (home south, visiting north). They sat on benches the opposite sides of each other; visiting team on the west side with the penalty boxes and home team on the east side. This made for some classic brawl moments.

The music had to be 99% provided by an organist that was well concealed on the upper north side of the stands (You could barely see him if you were sitting top row beneath him). In fact, the only time I can remember actual music playing was when the Royals would come out of their dressing room during play-offs (We Will Rock You). All official announcements were bilingual (My grade 7 teacher was the back up announcer).

They once had a mascot called Big Blue. Picture a low-budget version of the A&W bear but blue with a large hand-held bell. Mind you this was before my time as a fan so I'm guessing he was gone by the early 80's or late 70's.

During second intermission, they had a shoot-out contest for the fans. You were supposed to qualify by purchasing program and getting a lucky number. But programs were not popular (they rarely were updated it seemed), so the trick was to go to the souvenir stand at the main entrance of the arena and ask right before the intermission if they had three winners yet, if not, you were in. I must have shot at least four times and managed to win $200 in Shell gas once (Useless to a 13 year old but my parents were happy). I never saw or heard of anyone winning the car which was a shot to the far net in a hole the size of the puck.

Another intermission thing was that if you wanted to go into the main concourse of the building (which is where they sold tickets and where the bar was) you'd get a gate pass. This was before scanning was available so if you could manage to somehow sneak back into the arena with your gate pass in hand (this is where that funny floor level area came in handy), you could possibly get into a future game for free. These gate passes were color coded but were always being recycled.

Again, the arena itself was not characteristic in an old fashion way or high tech. It was a very well balanced, concrete and seats type of place that was very uniform with the exception the missing last bowl of seats. I'm sure it could be updated no problem (Basically it would need a new model time clock with a screen).

Apparently the arena would be filled to capacity when the Royals were part of the QMJHL where they won a Memorial Cup. But once a part of the OHL, they lost the die-hard hockey fans that used to travel across the near by Ontario border from Quebec and attendance was a problem. The Royals left town for Newmarket and the arena became home to the AHL team the Cornwall Aces, the Quebec Nordiques farm team. This team was short-lived in Cornwall due to the Nordiques' move to Colorado. The team stayed in Cornwall one more year after the move and Ed Lumley arena has not housed a full-time team since.

Not much has been done to the Complex since besides conventions, receptions and the occasional pre-season NHL game, concert or Cornwall Colts game. Most recently, they have begun construction on an aquatic centre/curling club that will be connected to the building and is expected to spark new life for the Complex. I also heard a rumor that the city was approached by the QMJHL to house another team but as far as I know nothing has come of it.
Inside the Cornwall Civic Complex
Ed Lumley Arena

How To Get There

From Ottawa:
Take Highway 417 east to Highway 138. Proceed south to Cornwall. Turn right on Cornwall Centre Road, then left on Brookdale Ave. Proceed South past the International Bridge. Brookdale turns left under the bridge and becomes Water Street. Proceed East.

From Toronto:
Take Highway 401 east to Brookdale Ave. exit. Proceed South past the International Bridge. Brookdale turns left under the bridge and becomes Water Street. Proceed East.

From Montreal:
Take Autoroute 20 or 40 west to Highway 401 then west to Brookdale Ave. Proceed South past the International Bridge. Brookdale turns left under the bridge and becomes Water Street. Proceed East.
What's it Used For Today?
The Ed Lumley Arena is a part of the Cornwall Civic Complex, which is the city's main event centre. A team called the Cornwall Comets out of a league called the Quebec Provincial Senior AA League currently calls the Complex home. It is a far cry from what Cornwall could potentially play host to. The Complex is also in constant use with trade shows, minor hockey, conventions and other stuff. Cornwall also would make a good location for the OHL to someday return to, let us all hope it happens.

The Royals started out as a QMJHL team in 1969, playing out of the ancient Water Street Arena. Oddly enough, they didn't move into the new building when it opened, but only in 1980 after continuing to play in the old barn for the whole of the 1970's.

Feedback

If anything is incorrect or you have something to add, please e-mail me at Email and I'll update the guide.


 


Copyright © Kevin Jordan 2002-07.
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Last Revised: September 14, 2007