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Location | 1111 S. Figueroa Street Los Angeles, California 90015 |
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Owner | L.A. Arena Company Anschutz Entertainment Group |
Operator | L.A. Arena Company Anschutz Entertainment Group |
Capacity | Basketball: 18,997 Hockey: 18,118 Arena Football: 18,118 Concerts: 20,000 |
Construction | |
Broke ground | March 31 1998 |
Opened | October 17 1999 |
Construction cost | $375 million USD |
Architect | NBBJ |
Tenants | |
Los Angeles Lakers (NBA) (1999-present) Los Angeles Clippers (NBA) (1999-present) Los Angeles Sparks (WNBA) (2001-present) Los Angeles Kings (NHL) (1999-present) Los Angeles Avengers (AFL) (2000-present) Los Angeles D-Fenders (D-League) (2006-present) |
Staples Center is a multipurpose sports arena in Downtown Los Angeles, California adjacent to the LA Live development. It is located next to the Los Angeles Convention Center complex. Staples Center was financed privately at a cost of $375 million and is named for the Staples office-supply company, one of the center's corporate sponsors that paid for naming rights.
History
Staples Center opened on October 17 1999, and became a two-time winner of the Pollstar-CIC Arena of the Year award soon after. It is home to the Los Angeles Lakers and Los Angeles Clippers of the NBA, the Los Angeles Sparks of the WNBA, the Los Angeles Kings of the NHL, and the Los Angeles Avengers of the AFL. It is the only arena that is home to five professional sports franchises.
The arena is host to 250 events and nearly 4,000,000 visitors a year. Since its opening day, Staples Center has hosted the 2000 Democratic National Convention, the 2002 U.S. Figure Skating Championships, the 2002 NHL All-Star game, the 2004 NBA All-Star Game, the 2004 Pacific Ten Conference Basketball Championships, the WTA Tour Championships from 2002 to 2005, the first ever Latin Grammy Awards in 2000, the annual Grammy Awards since 2000 with the exception of 2003, the Pacific Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament since 2002, the Summer X Games indoor competitions since 2003, the UFC 60 pay per view event, as well as numerous Concerts and HBO Championship Boxing matches.
The arena
There are a total of twelve locker and dressing rooms, including team-specific locker rooms for the Lakers, Clippers, and Kings. There are a series of meeting rooms in the arena, including the Bank of America conference area on the suite level and additional rooms in the attached, three-story office tower. There are extensive hospitality facilities, including a restaurant and club space on the suite level at one end of the arena, overlooking the arena floor.
The arena features a full-service ticket window, 1,200 television monitors throughout the facility, 23 refreshment stands spread among the arena's five concourses, as well as the Fox Sports SkyBox restaurant on the main plaza, the Royal Room on main concourse, the Arena Club and Grand Reserve Club above the premier seating level, a TeamLA store on the plaza level accessible from outside the arena, and the outdoor City View Grille. The arena also features a $2 million specialty lighting package, a $1.5 million Bose sound system, a Mitsubishi eight-sided, center-court scoreboard and videoboard, as well as a Daktronics fascia board along the upper seating level.
Staples Center seats up to 20,000 for concerts, 18,997 for basketball, and 18,118 for hockey and arena football. Two-thirds of the arena's seating, including 2,500 club seats, are in the lower bowl. There are also 160 luxury suites, including 15 event suites, on three levels between the lower and upper bowls.
Future developments
Main article: L.A. LiveThe Staples Center is a part of a much larger 4,000,000-square-foot (371,612.2 m) development by Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG) adjoining Staples Center and the Los Angeles Convention Center. The development, known as L.A. Live, broke ground on September 15, 2005. L.A. Live is designed to offer entertainment, retail and residential programming in the downtown Los Angeles area.
L.A. Live will feature entertainment venues, restaurants, retail commercial and residential spaces, television and radio broadcast studios, and concert spaces. It will feature a four star 1,100 room convention center headquarters hotel known as The Residences at The Ritz-Carlton, a 40,000-square-foot (3,716.1 m) outdoor plaza, an ESPN broadcast and restaurant facility, Regal Theatres, as well as Club Nokia, the Nokia Theatre Los Angeles, and Nokia Plaza.
Notes
- Outside the arena are statues of Wayne Gretzky and Magic Johnson, although both sports legends played at the Great Western Forum, where the Kings, Lakers and Sparks previously played. (The Los Angeles Clippers previously played at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena.)
- In 2005, the lower bowl purple seats were reupholstered to black seats.
- Staples Center was named New Major Concert Venue (2000) and Arena of the Year (2000 and 2001) by Pollstar Magazine and has been nominated each year since its 1999 opening.
- Staples Center measures 950,000 square feet (88,257.9 m) of total space, with a 94-foot (28.7 m) by 200-foot (61.0 m) arena floor. It stands 150 feet (45.7 m) tall.
- Load-in at the arena is accommodated through a floor-level dockway. There is a 15,000-square-foot (1,393.5 m) marshaling area for event production, as well as a dock area designed to accommodate up to six television production vehicles.
- Staples Center features an eight-sided, center-court/Ice scoreboard featuring four 12-foot (3.7 m) by 15-foot (4.6 m) Mitsubishi DiamondVision video screens and four 9-foot (2.7 m) by 12-foot (3.7 m) messageboards. In addition, the arena contains two complete television control rooms and 34 fixed camera positions.
- 2,500 short tons (2,268 t) of structural steel and 73,000 square yards (61,037.3 m) of concrete were used to build Staples Center at a cost of $375 million.
See also
References
- ^ "L.A. Facilities" (Press release). Los Angeles Sports Council. Retrieved 2008-01-01.
- ^ "AEG Staples Center" (Press release). AEG Worldwide. Retrieved 2008-01-01.
- ^ "About Staples Center" (Press release). AEG Worldwide. Retrieved 2008-01-01.
- ^ "AEG L.A. Live" (Press release). AEG Worldwide. Retrieved 2008-01-01.
- "L.A. Live timeline" (Press release). AEG Worldwide. Retrieved 2008-01-01.
External links
Preceded byLos Angeles Memorial Sports Arena 1984–1999 |
Home of the Los Angeles Clippers 1999–present |
Succeeded bycurrent |
Preceded byGreat Western Forum 1967–1999 |
Home of the Los Angeles Lakers 1999–present |
Succeeded bycurrent |
Preceded byGreat Western Forum 1967–1999 |
Home of the Los Angeles Kings 1999–present |
Succeeded bycurrent |
Preceded byfirst arena | Home of the Los Angeles Avengers 2000–present |
Succeeded bycurrent |
Preceded byGreat Western Forum 1997–1999 |
Home of the Los Angeles Sparks 1999–present |
Succeeded bycurrent |
Preceded byMadison Square Garden | Host of WrestleMania 21 2005 |
Succeeded byAllstate Arena |
34°2′35.01″N 118°16′1.64″W / 34.0430583°N 118.2671222°W / 34.0430583; -118.2671222
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