$80M indoor sports multiplex moves ahead in Manatee County


A proposed multiplex would be located on the Premier Sports Campus North.
A proposed multiplex would be located on the Premier Sports Campus North.
Image via Manatee County Commissioner Meetings / YouTube
  • Manatee-Sarasota
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An approximately $80 million indoor sports multiplex project including several ice rinks is moving forward in east Manatee County, after commissioners unanimously approved a motion in support of the public-private partnership.

Wesley Chapel-based Icemann Development will design, build, maintain and operate the venue, which is being planned on land owned by Manatee County near the Lakewood Ranch Library at Premier Sports Campus North. The spot is off State Road 70 and just east of the fast-growing SR 70/Lorraine Road intersection. 

“We’ve got a lot of experience in the building process,” Icemann Development CEO and co-founder Gordon Zimmermann told Manatee commissioners at their June 16 meeting. His firm built the TGH Iceplex, where the Tampa Bay Lightning train near Brandon. It also built, owns and operates the 150,000-square-foot AdventHealth Center Ice in Wesley Chapel.

A rendering presented to the commissioners showed the complex in Lakewood Ranch would occupy roughly 190,000 square feet.

“We're doing a few more facilities in the state of Florida, but this is really our prized area that we've always wanted to be in,” Zimmermann said of Lakewood Ranch. “The Lightning are deeply excited about it. We have a medical partner that wants to align with us,” and there will be opportunities for sponsorship with naming rights at the facility, subject to county approval.

The multiplex in Lakewood Ranch would include the following:

  • Four sheets of ice rinks, including one with about 2,500 permanent seats. Ice could be covered to allow for other sports or events
  • Food and beverage services
  • Pro shop/apparel/retail
  • Orthopedic/medical services and athletic training

The facility would be able to host sports like hockey, figure skating, curling, basketball, volleyball, cheer and dance, as well as consumer shows, tournaments and community events. In addition, it could be used as an emergency shelter, if county officials authorize it.

Free surface parking would be available and so would an 800-spot paid parking garage. A garage was something the county had been interested in but was not sure how to fund, Elliott Falcione, executive director of the Bradenton Area Convention and Visitors Bureau, told county commissioners.

“Surprisingly, [in] this deal, the private sector would pay for it,” Falcione said. “That vertical structure and that invaluable land would help us when we're hosting golf championships at The Concession … or other types of events when we're searching for parking in that very, very popular area of the county.”

According to the county’s business terms, it would receive 20% of gross parking garage revenues starting in year two of opening.


Tourist attraction

“Time is of the essence,” Falcione told county commissioners in presenting the project.

Icemann Development “has investors ready to invest” in the project and has preapproval from the bank, which “needs you all to consider this to continue to move the ball forward,” Falcione said before commissioners voted to authorize the county administrator to advance the proposal. That includes agreeing to specific business terms such as a 60-year land lease for a 22-acre county-owned parcel on the Premier Sports Campus North.

“The construction cost for this model is in [the] $75 to probably $85 million range,” Falcione said, calling the public-private partnership a “very unique opportunity.” 

Manatee County’s Tourist Development Council recommended in April to provide up to $5 million for horizontal infrastructure through the Tourist Development Tax on a reimbursement basis.

Falcione emphasized the importance of sports tourism to the county’s economy. Tourism has three segments in Manatee County, he said: leisure, which generates $1.95 billion in economic impact a year; sports, which brings in $400 million annually; and corporate, which nets $100 million a year.

“What's amazing is that [the Premier Sports campus] in 2025 generated about $100 million to the local economy,” Falcione said.

Once it is built, Falcione said the multiplex would have a projected $30 million economic stimulus impact annually, according to Tallahassee market research firm Downs & St. Germain.

“I think it’s going to drive a lot of tourism dollars,” Commissioner George Kruse said in support of the project. “The goal of Premier is to have everything be tournament level,” which he said aligns with what the multiplex would offer.

Kruse did have one request regarding sponsorship opportunities. “Don’t include Sarasota” in the name, he said.

“We'll make sure that it integrates with the county brand [and] Lakewood Ranch,” Falcione said. The county attorney would help to create language around naming opportunities, he added.


Stepping stone

The multiplex could be built by summer 2028, according to Falcione's projections.

Icemann “just started [the] site plan approval process,” Falcione said, outlining this timeframe for development:

  • October to December 2026: Site plan approval
  • January 2027: Groundbreaking for the multiplex
  • June to August 2028: Project completion

Sometime between August and September, Falcione said, the land lease would be presented to commissioners for approval.

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author

Elizabeth King

Elizabeth is a business news reporter with the Business Observer, covering primarily Sarasota-Bradenton, in addition to other parts of the region. A graduate of Johns Hopkins University, she previously covered hyperlocal news in Maryland for Patch for 12 years. Now she lives in Sarasota County.

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