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Timrå Isstadion

Coordinates: 62°30′21″N 17°21′00″E / 62.50583°N 17.35000°E / 62.50583; 17.35000
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SCA Arena
"Ladan"
Map
Former namesTimrå Isstadion (1966–2003)
Sydkraft Arena (2003–2005)
E.ON Arena (2005–2015)
Timrå Isstadion (2015–2016)
NHK Arena (2016–2020)
NHC Arena (2020–2023)
AddressSportvägen 4, Timrå, Medelpad, Sweden
Coordinates62°30′21″N 17°21′00″E / 62.50583°N 17.35000°E / 62.50583; 17.35000
Public transitBus interchange Sörberge Arenaskolan
OwnerTimrå Municipality
Capacity6,000 (4,600 seats + 1,400 stands)
Construction
Built1964–1966
OpenedSeptember 4, 1966
Renovated1994
Expanded2003 and 2006
Construction costSEK 50 million (2003 expansion)
Tenants
Timrå IK (1966–present)

Timrå Isstadion, currently known as SCA Arena and formerly known as NHC Arena, NHK Arena, E.ON Arena, Sydkraft Arena for sponsorship reasons, is an indoor sporting arena located in Timrå, Västernorrland County, Sweden. Construction began in 1964 and was inaugurated on 4 September 1966. Since then the venue has undergone several renovations and expansions. It is home arena of the SHL ice hockey team Timrå IK. Current capacity is 6 000.

History

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The venue in 2006.

The current building was constructed in 2003 on the grounds of, and re-using the roof from the old Timrå Isstadion. This predecessor dates back to 1966 and was inaugurated September 4, the same year, as the eighth ice hockey venue in Sweden. The old arena underwent a heavy refresh for the 1994/1995 season, resulting in a capacity of 5,500. When Timrå IK was promoted to the Swedish Hockey League in year 2000, the old Timrå Isstadion was timeworn and didn't met the requirement for a modern ice hockey venue so a second major reconstruction was made prior to season 2003/2004, resulting in today's capacity of 6 000, still far from the all-time high arena audience record from 20 January 1972 of 11 695 paying spectators when Timrå IK played against Brynäs IF.[1]

Video cube

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In October 2018, a new video cube was installed in the arena with a screen size of 170 square meters, among Europe's largest. It replaced the earlier one which was installed in 2005. The venture was jointly financed by Timrå IK and Northern Hall and Cover (NHC).[2] The new video cube was inaugurated 18 Oktober 2018 in a SHL game against Rögle BK.[3]

Lill-Strimmahallen

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Entrance to Lill-Strimmahallen

In the early 1990s, the need for a new ice hockeyrink grew. The youth teams often had late training sessions in NHC Arena or had to play on the field. With the help of Timrå Municipality and many non-profit forces, construction started of Lill-Strimmahallen, adjacent to NHC Arena. The hall was ready for the 1991/1992 season and was then Sweden's 251st ice rink.

The inauguration had to wait until Lill-Strimma's 50th birthday (if he lived on) on 16 Dec. 1994. The name became the logical "Lill-Strimmahallen". In total, the hall cost SEK 16 million.[4] Lill-Strimmahallen has a capacity of 300 spectators.[5]

Overview

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Overview of NHC arena from the away stand.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Rinks and venues" (in Swedish). Dubbeltallen. Retrieved 2021-04-14.
  2. ^ "Information regarding the new jumbotron" (in Swedish). Timrå IK. Retrieved 2021-04-14.
  3. ^ "Inauguration of the new jumbotron" (in Swedish). Timrå IK. Retrieved 2021-04-14.
  4. ^ "Rinks and venues" (in Swedish). Dubbeltallen. Retrieved 2021-04-14.
  5. ^ "Lill Strimma hallen". Eurohockey.com. Retrieved 2021-04-14.

Books

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Edholm, Bert (1995). Timrå IK - en klassiker (in Swedish).

Web pages

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