Updated September 18th, 2021 at 17:16 IST

Los Angeles Clippers break ground on new arena

The design meetings have been going on for years. Technology has evolved throughout the process. Painstaking decisions were made time and time again, right down to what an inch or two difference in leg room between rows would mean or where cupholders should be affixed to the seats.

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The design meetings have been going on for years. Technology has evolved throughout the process. Painstaking decisions were made time and time again, right down to what an inch or two difference in leg room between rows would mean or where cupholders should be affixed to the seats.

Finally, Steve Ballmer and the Los Angeles Clippers are ready to build their new home.

The Clippers' long-awaited, $1.8 billion, privately funded arena officially got a name Friday — Intuit Dome, it'll be called when it opens in 2024, the team making that announcement hours before the formal groundbreaking ceremony.

The practice facility, team offices for both business and basketball operations, retail space and more will all be on the site.

Ballmer, the team's owner, simply believes it'll be like no other building in the NBA.

"Basketball mecca! Basketball palazzo!" Ballmer, in his usual excitable way, said in an interview with The Associated Press.

He might be right.

Every detail — from the huge two-sided halo video screen that will hover over the court, to the triple-wide escalators, to how the bathrooms will be designed to get fans back in their seats as quickly as possible — has a purpose. The halo will include 44,000 square feet of 4K LED lighting, slightly more than one full acre and roughly six times the average size of other "big" screens in NBA buildings. The roof of the dome was designed to accommodate the halo, not the other way around.

Things the Clippers have seen in play at German soccer stadiums, other NBA buildings, NFL stadiums, even the Amazon Go checkout-free convenience stores all sparked various ideas that will be put into play at Intuit Dome.

"The ultimate home court. It doesn't feel like home court sometimes in our building today. But you're gonna have it and you're gonna have it here in Inglewood. Absolutely." Ballmer said during the groundbreaking ceremony.

The Clippers currently play at Staples Center, also the home of the Los Angeles Lakers and the NHL's Los Angeles Kings. Ballmer — who originally didn't want to build an arena when he bought the team — wound up beginning to plot a Clippers-only home years ago and formally unveiled the project in 2019, saying then that the Clippers would break ground in 2021 and open in 2024.

 

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Published September 18th, 2021 at 17:16 IST