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In 1976, St. Louis SC found a new home at the ice rink at Castle Oak Country Club located at I-270 and I-40 – currently the Chesterfield Athletic Club attached to a DoubleTree Hotel. In order to call this rink home, the facility asked that the club change its name to match the club. St. Louis SC was officially changed to the Castle Oak FSC.
Metro Ice Arena was a 4,600-capacity, 34,000 square foot indoor arena located in Lansing, Michigan. It hosted the International Hockey League 's Lansing Lancers in the 1974–75 season. [ 1 ] The venue was converted to a movie theater in the early 1980s.
In addition to sporting events, concerts, [5] circuses and ice shows the arena is also used for trade shows with a total of 39,900 square feet (3,710 m 2) of exhibit space (17,900 square feet (1,660 m 2) on the arena floor and 22,000 square feet (2,000 m 2) on the arena concourse). In December of 2023, it was announced that the Family Area was ...
The skating rink would generate 12 to 36 morning peak-hour trips and 97 evening peak-hour trip. And the 1,100,000-square-foot warehouse would generate 151 or 187 morning peak-hour trips and 188 or ...
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A new four-sided scoreboard was added at center ice in 1991. To make handicap-accessible seats, the rink's capacity was reduced to 6,170 in the early 1990s. In 1999–2000, the press box was relocated from center ice to the rink end to make room for 300 club seats on the south end. Luxury boxes were added a year later on the north end of the rink.
The center features four rinks: a "feature" rink with 2,500 tip-up seats and a four-sided HD video scoreboard, the St. Louis Blues main practice rink with seating for 750, the Bob Plager Community Rink with bleacher seating for 400 and dedicated access for sled hockey, and "The Barn", a covered outdoor rink with a 4,000 seat grandstand.
The community was named for a grove of sugar maple trees near the original town site. [4] References