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Venues

Venue Detail

Ducks of Anaheim

RSV Pro Facilities Report
February, 2016
Ducks of Anaheim

2695 E Katella Ave Anaheim, CA 92806 Phone: 714-704-2700 Fax: 714-704-2753 URL: www.mightyducks.com Owner: Henry Samueli League: National Hockey League, Western Conference, Pacific

Venue
Honda Center, 2695 E Katella Ave, Anaheim, CA 92806 Owner: City of Anaheim Managed by: Anaheim Arena Management Built: 1993 Capacity: 17,300 Permanent concession stands: 20 Concessionaire: Team Suite caterer: Team Soft drink: Coca Cola Beer: Multiple

Naming rights
Sold to: Honda Price: $60,000,000 Term: 15 years Expires: 2023

Ticket prices
Season tickets range from $720 to $10,125 Single tickets range from $24.00 to $248.00

Attendance
2013 average attendance: 15,887 2014 average attendance: 16,874

Suites
Quantity: 84 Term: 3 to 5 years Price: $100,000 to $185,000 Seats: 10 to 14 Includes: Tickets, parking and concierge service.

Club seats
Quantity: 1,716 Term: 1 to 2 years Price: $7,500 to $10,200 Includes: Tickets to Ducks games only, parking, in-seat wait service.

Financing
The $80 million arena was financed by the city and Ogden Corp. through certificates of participation.
The arena, also known as the Pond, is the home of the NHL Mighty Ducks. The building has 12-foot granite walls encircling the building and granite is used to outline the green glass archways on the building's north and south entrances.
Prices for club seats include access to all arena events.
Naming rights earn $1.5 million a year. The venue gets 25 percent of the first $1 million for the first 10 years. The management company, gets another 25 percent and the rest goes to the team.
The building got a new management firm in 2003. H&S Ventures of Corona del Mar took over the contract held by Covanta.
The new agreement lowers the city's debt payments and eliminates a $4 million annual management fee. Officials believe the building can now be profitable after total losses of $40.2 million in nine years. Its last complete fiscal year showed losses of $4.2 million.
The agreement gives H&S a share of building revenue. After $12 million, the firm will get 75 percent of earnings with 20 percent going to the city. The remaining 5 percent goes to the county as fees. If the company brings in a new major tenant, such as an NBA franchise, its earnings will climb to 80 percent. (Facilities, Ice Hockey, NHL, Professional Sports, Venue)