Clippers secure land for $1.3 billion arena in Inglewood, open wait list for season tickets
The Los Angeles Clippers received final approval from the Inglewood City Council on Tuesday for a $1.8 billion basketball arena and will move forward with construction next year near the site of the city’s new NFL stadium.
The project is slated to break ground next summer and open in time for the start of the 2024-25 NBA season. The team’s owners are so confident in their timeline they opened a wait list for season tickets and “other arena experiences.”
Murphy’s Bowl, the developer backed by Clippers owner Steve Ballmer, will pay $66.25 million for 22 acres of land acquired by Inglewood decades ago to remove residences deemed incompatible with an overhead flight path to LAX, according to a staff report. The proceeds from the sale will be split between the city, the Federal Aviation Administration, Los Angeles World Airports, and other local entities, including the Inglewood Unified School District.
“Today is a new chapter for the Inglewood Basketball and Entertainment Center, as we move from the land use entitlement process and look toward construction,” said Gillian Zucker, the Clippers president of business operations, in a statement. “Every part of the IBEC is being designed with purpose — with an unapologetic intensity that will define the experience together for players, musical talent and fans alike. This arena will prove, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that there is no replacement for live basketball and entertainment.”
18,000 fixed seats
The arena will feature 18,000 fixed seats for basketball games with up to 500 additional seats for other events; an 85,000-square-foot training facility, 71,000 square feet of team office space, a 25,000-square-foot medical clinic, an outdoor plaza with a stage and basketball court, and up to 63,000 square feet of space for retail, food and beverages, security, restrooms and other ancillary services. Two parking garages and a 150-room hotel also will be built on the site.
CAA Sports is working with the Clippers to sell the naming rights for the arena.
Inglewood will not provide public funding to the project, according to the development agreement. The Clippers, on the other hand, have pledged to spend $100 million on public benefits, including $75 million for affordable housing and renter support.
Part of the agreement establishes that Inglewood may use eminent domain to acquire private parcels needed for the project at Century Boulevard and Prairie Avenue if the Clippers can’t work out a deal with the owners. A city staff report states the developer has been “unable to acquire all private parcels” so far.
The approval for the arena project came on the same day as the opening of the long-awaited SoFi Stadium, the new home of the Los Angeles Rams and Chargers. The stadium, which is across the street from the arena project, is the largest in the NFL and can host up to 100,000 spectators for special events.
‘Something miraculous’
Mayor James T. Butts Jr. described the day as historic during Tuesday’s council meeting. In 2010, Inglewood had an $18 million budget deficit, as many as 38 murders a year, and extremely low property values “because no one wanted to move here from someplace else,” Butts said.
“We have something miraculous that has happened that has only happened in three mega-cities: New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles,” he said. “We attracted three professional sports teams, but we did in a two-and-a-half year period what took them generations to do.”
The arena is expected to cause “significant” and “unavoidable” increases in noise, traffic and pollutants, according to its environmental impact report. Residents who spoke against the project at Tuesday’s meeting criticized it as benefiting billionaires, while the increasing cost of living, driven up by new developments, continues to push out longtime residents. In 2019, residents responding to a city survey reported receiving rent increases of up to 140 percent. The City Council in response instituted a 5 percent cap on increases.
7,000 jobs
City officials argue the project will generate good jobs — up to 7,000 full- and part-time during construction — and financially support the initiatives designed to help renters and build more affordable housing.
Earlier this year, Ballmer purchased The Forum, a nearby concert venue, from Madison Square Garden for $400 million to end years of lawsuits that threatened to the delay the arena project.
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