Ralph Engelstad Arena (Minnesota)

Ralph Engelstad Arena (The Mini Ralph) (REA) is an indoor arena located in Thief River Falls, Minnesota. It is used primarily for ice sports, such as hockey, and was built by Jim Kobetsky of Schoen Associates based in Grand Forks, North Dakota. The Venue is the home arena of the Thief River Falls Norskies of the SIJHL[1] and the Lincoln High School Prowlers Hockey Programs (often referred to as the 'Thief River Falls Prowlers'). It replaced the older Huck Olson Memorial Arena which was home to the prowlers since 1970.[2]

Ralph Engelstad Arena
The Mini Ralph, the REA
Map
Location525 Brooks Avenue North
Thief River Falls, Minnesota 56701
Coordinates48°07′18″N 96°11′31″W / 48.12159°N 96.19197°W / 48.12159; -96.19197
OwnerCity of Thief River Falls
OperatorCity of Thief River Falls
Capacity3,569
Field size1.05 million sq ft (98,000 m2)
Surface200' x 85' (hockey)
Construction
OpenedNovember 29, 2003; 20 years ago (2003-11-29)
Construction cost$15 million
ArchitectSchoen Associates Grand Forks
Tenants
Thief River Falls Norskies (SIJHL) (2016–present)
Thief River Falls Prowlers (Lincoln High School)

History edit

On February 4, 2002, it was announced the Ralph Engelstad and his wife Betty, whom were living in Las Vegas, Nevada at the time, had donated $10 million which was to be used for a new multi-purpose facility in his hometown Thief River Falls, Minnesota. The project was approved in a city council meeting on February 12, 2002. Despite the donation, it was clear that additional funds would be needed for the project to come to fruition. Thus, a local fundraising campaign began in September of that year, which raised approximately an extra $3 million which was enough money to finish the project.[3]

The Arena would be officially dedicated on November 29, 2003. Though Ralph Engelstad would not live to see this. He would die of Lung Cancer on November 26, 2002 at 72 years old.[3]

In June 2005, The Construction of the Community room, or "Imperial Room" was finished. In the same year, A basketball floor and Arena decking were added.[3]

After Construction was completed, the Engelstad family would donate a further $13 million.[3]

Features edit

  • 2,800 Theatre-style seats[1]
  • 281 Bar stools along the perimeter of the bowl[1]
  • 2 concession stands[1]
  • 8 bathrooms[1]
  • Weight Room[1]
  • Hall of Fame section, which includes a bronze statue of Ralph Engelstad from when he played high school hockey at Thief River Falls as a goaltender[3]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Facilities". www.trfnorskies.com. Retrieved April 2, 2020.
  2. ^ "Huck Olson Memorial". Vintage Minnesota Hockey - History. Retrieved April 2, 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d e "Ralph Engelstad Arena". Vintage Minnesota Hockey - History. Retrieved April 2, 2020.

External links edit