Across Canada, indoor sports complexes play a key role in keeping recreational and competitive sport accessible year-round. In places like Ottawa, these facilities are often known locally by informal names such as hornets’ nest, reflecting long-standing community use rather than official branding. From air-supported domes to multi-rink facilities, these venues provide weather-independent training space, consistent scheduling, and shared infrastructure for teams, leagues, camps, and community programs.
Most complexes combine turf fields, ice surfaces, or configurable training areas with booking systems designed for organized groups rather than casual drop-in use. As a result, they are commonly used by youth academies, adult leagues, schools, and local associations looking for reliable indoor space during winter months or extreme weather. In Ottawa, searches like soccer dome near me or soccer dome Ottawa often point toward the same east-end facilities historically associated with the Gloucester dome area.
The facilities below represent a cross-section of established indoor sports complexes across several Canadian provinces, each offering year-round access with a different sport focus and community role. In the National Capital Region, these venues are sometimes collectively referred to as a Superdome sports centre, or simply a super dome, depending on local usage.
Selected Year-Round Indoor Sports Complexes in Canada
- Toronto Soccerplex – North York, ON
Indoor turf facility known for small-sided soccer fields, leagues, rentals, and social play. - LCI Sports Centre – Etobicoke, ON
Air-supported sports dome primarily used for organized field-sport training and rentals. - Centrefield Sports – London, ON
Large multi-sport indoor fieldhouse supporting turf sports and batting-based training. - Pitch Indoor Sports – Sarnia, ON
Indoor training complex offering turf fields, batting cages, and performance-focused facilities. - Don Hartman North East Sportsplex – Calgary, AB
Multi-purpose indoor sports centre anchored by ice arenas and community recreation space. - Complexe sportif CN – Brossard, QC
Large indoor sports facility combining ice rinks, an indoor soccer pitch, and event space.
Toronto Soccerplex – Toronto, ON
A long-established indoor turf sports facility in North York that’s known as one of Toronto’s main year-round soccer hubs. The complex features multiple small-sided turf fields surrounded by a central clubhouse with amenities like a lounge/bar, showers, locker rooms, and free onsite parking. It’s popular for pickup soccer, organized leagues, field rentals, and events – from casual games to birthday parties. Booking is available via online platforms like CatchCorner.
- Best for: Soccer leagues, 5v5 pickup games, team bookings, social play
- Season: Indoor & year-round
- Facilities: 7 turf fields, lounge, showers, parking

LCI Sports Centre – Etobicoke, ON
A versatile indoor sports dome located at Lakeshore Collegiate Institute, offering year-round access to field sports including soccer, football, lacrosse, and more. The facility operates mainly by advance booking and does not typically offer drop-in play; groups rent field time for practices or games. It’s especially used by local teams and communities for training sessions, and summer camps like Nike Soccer Camps are hosted here too.
- Best for: Organized practices, team rentals, seasonal sports training
- Season: Indoor & all weather
- Facilities: Large turf field, dome environment


Centrefield Sports Inc – London, ON
Centrefield Sports is one of the largest indoor multi-sport facilities in London, centred around a spacious Fieldhouse with high ceilings and flexible turf space. It supports a variety of sports – from baseball, softball and football to soccer – along with batting cages and training zones that can be rented by hour. It’s a popular choice for team practices and private coaching.
- Best for: Multi-sport training, team rentals, baseball/softball practice
- Season: Indoor year-round
- Facilities: Large turf field, batting cages, training space
Pitch Indoor Sports Ltd. – Sarnia, ON
Sarnia’s first dedicated indoor sports training complex, designed to serve the local field sports community year-round. The facility includes premium turf and fully enclosed batting cages, supporting baseball, softball, soccer, lacrosse, football and rugby training. It also offers strength training areas and tech-enhanced systems like HitTrax for performance tracking. Pitch aims to be a community hub with flexible bookings and programs for all ages.
- Best for: Sports training, batting practice, field rentals
- Season: Indoor & year-round
- Facilities: Turf field, batting cages, strength training

Don Hartman North East Sportsplex (NESS) – Calgary, AB
A major community sports complex in Calgary with two full NHL-sized arenas and extensive indoor facilities. While it’s best known for ice hockey, the Sportsplex also supports year-round recreational sport and community programming. Note that this venue is more multi-purpose than strictly “field sports dome,” with amenities for public skating, hockey leagues, training and events.
- Best for: Hockey, skating, community sport events
- Season: Indoor year-round
- Facilities: Double ice arenas, community sport spaces

Complexe sportif CN – Brossard, QC
A large multipurpose indoor facility near Quartier Dix30 that serves as the training centre for the Montreal Canadiens professional hockey club and offers community access to year-round sport. It includes two ice hockey rinks and an indoor soccer pitch, among other rentable sports spaces. Public skating and recreational activities are available at times, and the facility hosts leagues, training sessions, and special events.
- Best for: Hockey training, skating, indoor soccer
- Season: All seasons indoor
- Facilities: Ice rinks, indoor soccer pitch, event spaces

How These Indoor Complexes Are Actually Used
On paper, most indoor sports complexes look similar. In practice, they tend to fall into very different usage patterns depending on location, design, and community demand. Some facilities function primarily as league hubs, with tightly packed evening schedules dominated by recurring bookings. Others act more like training spaces, where teams rotate in for short technical sessions, skills development, or off-season conditioning. Multi-surface venues often split their time between competitive sport and community programming, especially during daytime hours.
What stands out across the complexes reviewed here is how heavily they are used by:
- youth academies and development programs
- adult leagues filling winter schedules
- schools and camps seeking predictable indoor space
- coaches running structured training blocks rather than casual play
For many teams, these complexes are not substitutes for outdoor fields – they are infrastructure that keeps entire seasons viable when weather, daylight, or field availability would otherwise shut things down.
The Trade-Offs of Indoor Play That Teams and Parents Notice
Indoor facilities solve a lot of problems, but experienced users also recognise the trade-offs that come with them. Consistent conditions mean fewer cancellations and better planning, but they also change how sessions feel. The pace of play is often faster, sound carries differently, and space can feel tighter – especially in domes configured for small-sided formats. For younger players, this often improves touches and decision-making. For older athletes, it shifts training toward precision and conditioning rather than long-form match flow.
Parents and spectators tend to notice practical differences too:
- easier scheduling during winter months
- less downtime caused by weather
- clearer start and end times for sessions
- facilities that feel more structured, but less flexible
Over time, many teams end up using indoor complexes strategically, combining them with outdoor play rather than replacing it entirely.
Disclaimer: This article is provided for informational and editorial purposes only. We are not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to Superdome East – Ottawa, ON, its operators, management, or partners in any way. We do not represent this facility and do not act as an official source of information. Operating hours, availability, pricing, programs, and services may change over time.
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