rdfs:comment
| - As of the 2011–12 season, Vida Arena is the Elitserien's newest arena but has a spectator capacity of 4,800, making it the Elitserien's capacity-wise smallest arena. However, the design allows for future extensions that could increase the capacity to 6,500 spectators. The spectator capacity is planned for extension to 6,000 during autumn 2011.
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abstract
| - As of the 2011–12 season, Vida Arena is the Elitserien's newest arena but has a spectator capacity of 4,800, making it the Elitserien's capacity-wise smallest arena. However, the design allows for future extensions that could increase the capacity to 6,500 spectators. The spectator capacity is planned for extension to 6,000 during autumn 2011. The arena was officially inaugurated on 17 September 2011, in an ice hockey game between Växjö Lakers and Linköpings HC. The arena tickets for the game were outsold within just one hour, with the Lakers' marketing manager speculating that they could've sold out two arenas. Växjö Lakers former crowd favorite Shjon Podein watched the game live in the arena. Linköping won the game 4–2 in front of 5,502 spectators. However, the Lakers' premier game on 13 September, away against Frölunda HC, was shown on the Vida Arena's JumboTron in front of 2,400 spectators, with free entrance, as a preview of the Vida Arena experience and a test of the arena's technical features. Frölunda won the game 2–0. The Vida Arena is the first cashless arena in Sweden. It is part of the project "Arenastaden" (Arena town), which also includes a new soccer arena, a floorball arena, and an arena for athletics. The Vida group acquired the naming rights for the arena in September 2010, for the upcoming 14 years.
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