optionally use the board with VNAs too.
I'm curious, as I've never had a VNA. What about this board would be useful to VNA users?
It's almost the same thing as the LCR meter, but the implementation is different internally. Unlike an LCR meter, one downside is that the sweet-spot for accuracy is far narrower, but on the positive side, the measurement frequency range can be large (to GHz and beyond if desired, although the minimum frequency is often say 10 kHz or 50 kHz, it would be rare for it to function down to say 50/60 Hz, although some VNAs can be made to operate to such low frequencies).
Instead of Kelvin clips, there are just two-wire connections using coax usually. The way it works is that the VNA causes an AC voltage to be applied at a frequency, and some of the signal reflects back from the device-under-test if it doesn't look like exactly 50 ohm at the given frequency, and the VNA measures the reflection and compares it internally with what was sent (in terms of signal level and phase), to make its internal calculations. After a frequency sweep, the output can be plotted in various selectable forms.
The photo shows a DIY board that is similar to your test board, but only with RF connectors and no kelvin clip holes. My board has the open and short (as @mawyatt mentions), but for a VNA a 50-ohm termination is also needed for the calibration, whereas LCR meters often don't need that. If your board was used with a VNA (for say measurements from tens of kHz to tens of MHz), then a 50 ohm resistor location (could be 49.9 ohm, or two 100 ohm in parallel) would be good.
My board only has space for one component that I have to desolder if I want to measure a different component. Eventually the SMD pad can tear off due to the repeated soldering operations, so it isn't that good unfortunately.
I made this board by copying an existing TI board Gerber files (it was a reference design for PCB antennas, but I deleted the antennas from the Gerber files and copied the 'open' portion to make the DUT area (with the solder mask removed in the Gerber files from the end of course).
The chart shows example output for a particular inductor.