The team has also prototyped lightweight robots (“snow bots”) to clear snow from thin ice. Snow inhibits ice growth, because air pockets in lightly compacted snow act as an insulator. In the disastrous 2023 season, alternating periods of rain and snow created layers of insulated water below the Skateway’s ice. “You had the thickness, but it was so soft that we couldn’t put any weight on it,” Devine explains.
Other aspects of the research project involve mapping ice depth along the entire Skateway, and assessing the effects of storm drains near the canal, as stormwater is usually warmer than canal water and laced with dissolved road salt — both factors that slow down ice growth.
Although the research project is slated to end this year, Kenny hopes to have his students collecting canal data long into the future. As he points out, the proximity of the Carleton campus to the canal makes it a perfect spot for students to gain practical experience.
Climate change isn’t a strictly linear process, so conditions along the Skateway continue to fluctuate. In the winter of 2024–25, just two years after the Skateway couldn’t open, frosty temperatures and scant snowfalls led to a 52-day skating season. That winter, more than 1.1 million people took to a canal blessed with what Kenny recalls as “perfect ice.”
One of them was Imee Plurad, who first visited Ottawa in 2019 and was captivated by the unusual sight of skaters gliding along the frozen waterway. “I said to myself, ‘Oh, one day, I will skate the whole stretch.’”
The following year, she moved to the capital. Since she hadn’t learned to skate growing up in the Philippines, she taught herself the basics on community rinks, taking a few spills. “I hurt myself too many times!” she says now, laughing. “But it didn’t stop me.”
In 2025, she finally skated the entire length of the canal and back. It took her three hours on a frigid, blustery day. “But I enjoyed the experience, and I’m so proud of myself,” the 42-year-old caregiver says. At the end of her trip, she spotted the Canadian flag flying from the Peace Tower on Parliament Hill and burst into happy tears.
This season, as the full Skateway opens early and Ottawans take to the ice, the NCC hopes to make memories like Plurad’s for decades to come.