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Penn State to offer 'North Loge seating' for Ohio State and Washington; here's what it is and how much it costs

Greg Pickelby:Greg Pickelabout 8 hours

GregPickel

penn-state-football-north-end-zone-loge
(Photo courtesy of Penn State Athletics)

If you don’t yet have tickets to Penn State-Ohio State or the Nittany Lions’ White Out game clash with Washington, or if you do but would consider selling or otherwise giving up what you already have, this new seat offering at Beaver Stadium may be of interest to you. Head coach James Franklin’s team does not return to the 107,000-seat venue until November. By then, it will have had its second bye and also played at USC and at Minnesota. When it does, the athletic department will be offering loge seating in the north end zone. The ‘limited amount’ of seating was announced on Wednesday.

A picture provided with an email that includes information for how fans can buy the premium seating in the north end zone show fans sitting in a blocked off box on what appears to be the concourse area of the lower bowl. The four fans are sitting in office-type chairs with a table in front of them. The seats are covered from the elements, as well. Here is more information from a news release:

“Experience Penn State Football like never before with the latest introduction to Beaver Stadium.  The new North Loge seating offers a semi-private premium space equipped with a table and comfortable seats, all with excellent lower-level views onto the field. Each North Loge package comes with:

–Four (4) game tickets
–One (1) preferred parking space in Lot 32
–Attendant service for food & beverage orders / delivery
–Overhead coverage to protect from weather elements

According to the athletic department’s website, the ‘north loge seating’ package starts at $2,400. Fans who are interested in more details can click here. Those who want to buy a package can click here to visit Ticketmaster.

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Premium seating is part of the Penn State Beaver Stadium renovation plan

When Penn State completes its west side renovation before the 2027 season, fans will have numerous premium seating options around the stadium. Some work has already started on the building, but the work on the $700 million project will start in earnest at the end of the 2024 season.

“We need the revenue to come off that building to pay for the renovation,” Penn State Athletic Director Pat Kraft said at Big Ten Media Days this summer. “We don’t have enough premium, [and] we actually lost an event, a big, big, big event because we didn’t have premium. And that has to be a part of it.

“So all of that told, it wasn’t like we threw a dart and said, ‘Hey this is what it is.’ That’s what it costs to do what we need to do to get the building up healthy and alive again, and then to fix a lot of the other issues, and then when you do that, you’ve got to pay for it. The west side premium’s going to help us pay for it.”

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