![]() “In the midst of booming development-which has caused skyrocketing rents and the loss of affordable housing-it simply does not make any sense to prioritize an NBA arena over the needs of Inglewood residents without investing in the needs of residents,” Uplift Inglewood member D’artagnan Scorza said in a recent press release, “Public land should be used for the public good, and access to housing is central to building strong communities.” ![]() Housing costs in the area had soared since 2016, when the NFL agreed to let the Rams and Chargers relocate to Inglewood. ![]() The California Surplus Land Act requires that public land be prioritized for affordable housing development before any other uses. First, from the Uplight Inglewood Coalition, an organization looking to strengthen Inglewood residents’ political power, is suing the city on allegations that the city’s deal to sell the land for the arena violated California state law. The project must overcome several legal challenges that cloud its potential success. Our goal is to build a facility that resets fans’ expectations while having a transformative impact on the city we will call home.” Ballmer, one of the richest people in the world, will privately finance the mixed-use development. “What that means to me is an unparalleled environment for players, for fans, for sponsors and for the community of Inglewood. The grand vision includes a basketball arena, corporate office building, sports medicine clinic, retail, community and youth-oriented spaces, parking garages, a solar-panel-clad roof, indoor-outdoor “sky gardens,” and an outdoor game-viewing area with massive digital screens.īallmer’s goal is to create, “the best home in all of sports,” he said in a statement accompanying the release of the renderings. Ballmer told ESPN, “I want it to be a noisy building… I really want that kind of energy.” Team owner Steve Ballmer and the city of Inglewood are moving forward with the $1 billion, 900,000-square-foot NBA arena over neighborhood concerns and lawsuits over the project.ĭesigned by local architecture and engineering firm AECOM, the metal-clad, oval-shaped arena is said to be inspired by the “swoosh” of a basketball net. The Los Angeles Clippers have released initial renderings of their brand new 18,500-seat arena expected to open in 2024.
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