Los Angeles Times

Memorial items collected by Lakers

Fan tributes to Kobe and Gianna Bryant left outside Staples Center will be preserved.

- By Broderick Turner

The Lakers along with Staples Center and L.A. Live have collected the memorial items left in honor of Kobe Bryant and will wait for instructio­ns from the Bryant family.

Lee Zeidman, the president of Staples Center, L.A. Live and Microsoft Theater, tweeted that the cleanup began Monday at 4 a.m. at L.A. Live and they had boxed 1,353 basketball­s dedicated to Bryant and his 13-year-old daughter, Gianna, who died along with seven others when their helicopter crashed into a hillside in Calabasas on Jan. 26.

Vanessa Bryant last week asked for some of the items to be preserved for the family. The Lakers began collecting items left at their practice facility in El Segundo on Sunday.

“After boxing everything up, and due to the overwhelmi­ng amount of shoes and stuffed animals and basketball­s and everything else, we reached out to the Lakers and determined it was best for us to store everything at L.A. Live until further notice,” Zeidman said. “And that’s what we’re doing.”

Zeidman said they will take the perishable items, compost them and spread them around the complex. That idea came from when Manchester Arena in England became the site of a suicide bombing after an Ariana Grande concert in 2017.

Manchester took “all the flowers and everything and they took them all and they composted everything and they spread them around the city,” Zeidman said.

“So we’re going to compost all those flowers out there and spread them around the plants in and around L.A. Live and in and around Staples Center,” he said. “So that means that all those fans that took the time to buy the f lowers and plants and brought them down there, some of that will still be around the site.”

In lieu of leaving items at Staples Center or L.A. Live, it has been suggested fans donate to MambaSport­sFoundatio­n.org or MambaOnThr­ee.org.

 ?? Photograph­s by Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? XAVIER DAVENPORT, 32, pays his respects to Kobe Bryant at a makeshift memorial for the Lakers star downtown at L.A. Live. “I saw him three times a week. That’s more than my biological father,” Davenport said.
Photograph­s by Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times XAVIER DAVENPORT, 32, pays his respects to Kobe Bryant at a makeshift memorial for the Lakers star downtown at L.A. Live. “I saw him three times a week. That’s more than my biological father,” Davenport said.
 ??  ?? KOBE BRYANT’S image peers above candles at a memorial at L.A. Live. The items were collected early Monday morning and are being stored there.
KOBE BRYANT’S image peers above candles at a memorial at L.A. Live. The items were collected early Monday morning and are being stored there.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States