A member of the Punk Rock Punishers, in purple, elbows a skater from the Horrific Haunters, in green, during a roller derby bout in front of a sell-out crowd at H-F Auditorium on Saturday, April 15. The event was organized by Chicago Knockouts Roller Derby, which hosts monthly bouts at the Homewood venue. (Colin Thomas/Thomas Photographic Services)
Entertainment, Local News

Homewood board approves temporary use agreement for Chicago Knockouts Roller Derby at Auditorium

The Homewood Village Board approved a temporary, month-to-month agreement allowing the Chicago Knockouts Roller Derby team to continue using the Homewood Auditorium as the village prepares for upcoming renovations at the Feb. 24 meeting. 

Under the agreement, the Chicago Knockouts Roller Derby LLC will be permitted to use the auditorium at 2010 Chestnut Road beginning March 1. The arrangement will remain in place until renovation work begins this spring or until the village ends the agreement, Homewood Assistant Village Manager Terence Acquah said. 

The board previously renewed a month-to-month lease with the Homewood Arts Council in July 2025, allowing continued use of the facility. That lease was terminated in December as the village began preparing for planned improvements to the auditorium, he said. 

A member of the Punk Rock Punishers, in purple, elbows a skater from the Horrific Haunters, in green, during a roller derby bout in front of a sell-out crowd at H-F Auditorium on Saturday, April 15. The event was organized by Chicago Knockouts Roller Derby, which hosts monthly bouts at the Homewood venue. (Colin Thomas/Thomas Photographic Services)
A member of the Punk Rock Punishers, in purple, elbows a skater from the Horrific Haunters, in green, during a roller derby bout in front of a sell-out crowd at H-F Auditorium in 2023. The event was organized by Chicago Knockouts Roller Derby. Now that the village is preparing to renovate the facility, the Knockouts use of it will be limited and temporary.
(Colin Thomas/Thomas Photographic Services)

During the Arts Council’s tenancy, the Chicago Knockouts Roller Derby used the space for practices, events and youth programming. As renovation planning moves forward, the organization requested temporary access to continue holding practices and youth classes until construction activities begin, Acquah said. 

The newly approved agreement limits use of the facility to roller derby practices, training sessions and other non-spectator activities unless additional permission is granted. The organization will pay $200 per month to cover professional cleaning costs, he said. 

According to Acquah, the short-term arrangement allows community programming to continue while maintaining flexibility in the renovation timeline.

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