Listen to funky tunes and slip your feet into a pair of retro rollerskates for the Pop-Up Roller Disco at Robson Square on Saturday evening.
“If anyone’s been iceskating there, which a lot of people in Â鶹´«Ă˝Ół»have, it’s just as much fun and a lot warmer,” says Rollerskate Â鶹´«Ă˝Ół»founder Andrea Fraser-Winsby.
DJ K-Tel will be spinning disco, funk, pop, soul, R&B and rock tunes from 7 to 10 p.m. and skate rentals are available.
“I’m working with a company who has just recently acquired a really nice fleet of old-school rental skates — the old-fashioned suede with the orange wheels that everybody remembers,” Fraser-Winsby says.
She had retired from roller derby in 2013 because “it’s tough on the old bod” but she really missed the skating. She decided to create Rollerskate Â鶹´«Ă˝Ół»last year because “the city doesn’t have a real rollerskating rink.”
The group started out with skates on the seawall and “it just grew from there.”
They’ve amassed a large following, she says including, “the old-school skater from the ’70s and ’80s who are reliving their past and dusting off their skates.
“But there’s always the younger crowd that’s into the retro scene and loves the nostalgia. There are also the people that don’t necessarily want to go to bars or nightclubs for fun things to do at night.”
The Robson Square event is for those 16 and older.
Fraser-Winsby grew up in Calgary skating at Lloyd’s Roller Rink, which is “one of the best roller rinks in Canada — beautiful floor, great staff who really cared about the sport, really loved kids. Unfortunately the owner passed away a couple of years ago and the family sold it. It closed down about a month ago, which was pretty devastating to that community but roller skating will prevail.”
Rollerskate Â鶹´«Ă˝Ół»is planning another event for May 27 and will be hosting fundraisers for a local charity in June and September. More details will beÂ