Imperial Valley Press

LAFC’s downtown stadium sets new benchmark for US soccer

- BY GREG BEACHAM AP Sports Writer

LOS ANGELES — The grand lobby inside Banc of California Stadium resembles the atrium of a luxury hotel, with burnished gold walls around the elevators and spacious staircases leading well-to-do patrons throughout the brand-new building.

The arena’s dozens of spacious suites would fit perfectly in an upscale Vegas casino or Hollywood nightclub, particular­ly when they’re filled with partygoers popping bottles and dipping their feet in the wading pool.

But outside on the echoing concourses and in the steep grandstand­s, Banc of California Stadium is an unmistakab­le soccer shrine. The arena feels bigger, taller and grander than its 22,000-seat capacity, and the entire structure was built to create an indelible atmosphere from the moment its first ball is finally kicked Sunday night.

“When you put people and noise and energy and passion in here, it’s just going to be incredible,” Los Angeles FC coach Bob Bradley said.

Los Angeles’ first new outdoor sports arena in a half-century is opening for business a mere 18 months after constructi­on began. It sits on the former site of the famed Los Angeles Sports Arena, just south of downtown on Figueroa Street and next door to the fabled Coliseum in Exposition Park.

LAFC will host the Seattle Sounders in the latest landmark in a remarkable 3 1/2-year journey for the Major League Soccer expansion team that now has a home worthy of its lofty ambitions of global prominence.

The stadium’s rapid rise is a testament to the power of vision and planning — and most of all, to the deep pockets of LAFC’s ownership group. The $350 million Banc of California Stadium — the most expensive soccer-specific stadium in U.S. history — was privately financed, which freed the designers and workers from many of the usual restrictio­ns on projects with less ambition and less money.

Jonathan Emmett, the design director at LA-based Gensler Sports, and his associates saw Banc of California as an opportunit­y to raise the bar on soccer stadiums on this continent and beyond.

“One of the main messages that the ownership group put out on Day One was this idea of bringing the world’s game to the world’s city, and having bigger aspiration­s than this being just about an MLS team,” Emmett said. “How do we get people talking about LAFC along with the Liverpools, the Manchester Uniteds, the Real Madrids, the Barcelonas? They had a real aspiration to be one of the big boys. And so we realized, ‘OK, we need a world-class stadium that’s going to live up to that expectatio­n.’”

The designers and architects believe they’ve done it.

The field is 22 feet below street level, creating a momentous aspect to the mere act of entering the stadium. The stands are compact and tall, with no seat more than 135 feet from the sidelines.

The North End supporters’ section begins 12 feet off the pitch and is set at a 34-degree angle, with foldup seats and standing rails that should create an imposing presence behind the goal. The section’s capacity is 3,252, and that number was later chosen as the name for the combined supporters’ groups, which are already going strong in Los Angeles before the team’s first home game.

The front row of the westside stands is just 16 feet from the field, and there is no advertisin­g between the players and fans. That feature — similar to an NBA arena — was insisted upon by LAFC co-owner Peter Guber, a part-owner of the Golden State Warriors and longtime Lakers fan.

 ?? AP PHOTO/GREG BEACHAM ?? In this Thursday, photo workers prepare the playing field at Banc of California Stadium for its official opening today, and the upcoming home debut of Los Angeles Football Club. The MLS expansion team built its $350 million new home in about 18 months,...
AP PHOTO/GREG BEACHAM In this Thursday, photo workers prepare the playing field at Banc of California Stadium for its official opening today, and the upcoming home debut of Los Angeles Football Club. The MLS expansion team built its $350 million new home in about 18 months,...

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