Discover the Intuit Dome in Los Angeles

The New $2-Billion Home of the LA Clippers

Jennifer Steinkamp "Swoosh" at the Intuit Dome
Jennifer Steinkamp, "Swoosh," 2024. Lights built into the building skin. Commissioned by the LA Clippers for Intuit Dome. Photograph by Iwan Baan.

Los Angeles will add to its world-class collection of sports and event venues with the opening of the $2-billion Intuit Dome, which will join SoFi Stadium and the Kia Forum in Inglewood. GRAMMY Award-winning artist Bruno Mars will kick off the grand opening festivities with a pair of concerts on August 15 and 16. The new home of the Los Angeles Clippers boasts numerous state-of-the-art features and amenities, along with an extraordinary public art program. Read on and discover LA's newest arena, the Intuit Dome.

Experience the Intuit Dome

For Clippers fans and visitors alike, the 18,000-seat Intuit Dome experience will be second to none:

  • The most legroom in the NBA
  • "The Wall" - 51 uninterrupted rows of seats near the visitor’s bench
  • The Halo Board - at nearly a full acre, it's the largest-ever double-sided halo display in an arena setting
  • The Plaza - the 80,000 square-foot outdoor plaza will host public and community events; includes two bars, a restaurant and 5,000 square-foot team store; and is anchored by a full-size, regulation basketball court with a 70-foot screen that stretches key-to-key

Along with the opening Bruno Mars concerts, a full slate of events has been announced, including four Usher shows in September; Weezer (Oct. 11), Billy Joel (Oct. 12), David Gilmour (Oct. 25), Cyndi Lauper (Nov. 23) and UCLA vs Gonzaga on December 28.

Parking entrances at Intuit Dome
Parking entrances | Photo: Intuit Dome

REGIONAL PARK & RIDE SHUTTLE
Beginning with the Bruno Mars shows, Intuit Dome will offer a complimentary Regional Park & Ride Shuttle for all concerts. The high-capacity shuttles will transport fans from five convenient locations across Los Angeles County. The shuttles will drop off attendees at the Intuit Dome Mobility Hub, located on Level One of the East Garage. The complimentary shuttle service is available exclusively for ticketed fans. Reservations are strongly recommended to guarantee a spot.

Regional Park & Ride Shuttle Locations:

  • Downtown LA – Union Station
  • Culver City – Metro E Line Expo/Sepulveda Station
  • South Bay/Gardena – Harbor Gateway Transit Center
  • Woodland Hills – Pierce College
  • El Monte – LA Metro Station

Shuttle rides can be booked on mobile devices in the "Plan Your Visit" section of the “LA Clippers + Intuit Dome” app. Fans can also reserve directly at the Intuit Dome website. Each booking includes a ride to and from the event - no need to book a return trip.

After parking, look for the orange "Intuit Dome Park & Ride Shuttle" directional signs. The shuttles will leave the Park & Ride lots from two hours before doors open through the event start time. After the event, the shuttles will depart from the Intuit Dome Mobility Hub at their scheduled time. Locate your shuttle by viewing its location within the app.

Michael Massenburg "Cultural Playground" at Intuit Dome
Michael Massenburg, "Cultural Playground," 2024. Porcelain enamel on steel panels. Commissioned by the LA Clippers for Intuit Dome. Photograph by Iwan Baan.

The Art of the Intuit Dome

In July 2024, Gillian Zucker, CEO of Halo Sports & Entertainment, unveiled six commissioned public artworks that will welcome everyone to the Intuit Dome, from murals to digital installations and sculpture. A seventh artwork by Charles Gaines will be unveiled at a later date.

“We designed Intuit Dome to be a place that brings people together,” said Zucker. “When it came to our public art, we wanted to deliver a collection that is as compelling to people well-versed in art as it is to a novice viewer. We are eager to make these unique works from these amazing artists available to everyone when Intuit Dome opens in August.”

Additionally, the Clippers commissioned MacArthur Foundation “genius grant” winner Walter J. Hood, founder and creative director of Hood Design Studio, to design the landscape of the Intuit Dome campus; internationally acclaimed fashion photographer and filmmaker Glen Luchford to create player portrait photographs to be installed inside the arena; and renowned visual artist Jonas Wood to design the LA Clippers City Edition uniforms and court. At its opening, Intuit Dome will also feature an exhibition of photographs by Catherine Opie - on loan from MOCA - to convey the sense of community.

Michael Massenburg "Cultural Playground" at Intuit Dome
Michael Massenburg, "Cultural Playground," 2024. Porcelain enamel on steel panels. Commissioned by the LA Clippers for Intuit Dome. Photograph by Iwan Baan.
"[Cultural Playground] is a celebration of our diverse culture, and how we welcome everyone to share in our playground.” ~ Michael Massenburg

 

Michael Massenburg - Cultural Playground
Born in San Diego, raised in South Central LA and now based in Inglewood, Michael Massenburg began his art career at the nearby Watts Towers. For many visitors and countless motorists driving by Intuit Dome, the first artwork to come into view will be Massenburg’s Cultural Playground, a joyful mural of printed porcelain enamel on steel panel measuring 25 feet tall and 100 feet wide. Cultural Playground expresses the artist’s belief that “the two most profound things that unite people are the arts and sports.” Figures of basketball, tennis, and soccer players; singers, musicians, and dancers play across the mural, in settings that range from Inglewood’s legendary Fox Theatre to the red lantern plazas of Chinatown to the city’s parks.

Glenn Kaino "Sails" at Intuit Dome
Glenn Kaino, "Sails," 2024. Concrete, stainless-steel armature, wood, basketball hoops, paint. Commissioned by the LA Clippers for Intuit Dome. Photograph by Iwan Baan.

Glenn Kaino - Sails
Installed at the main entrance to Intuit Dome, Sails by LA native Glenn Kaino - a massive sculpture made of concrete, painted steel and wood and rising nearly 60 feet - evokes the clipper ships that connected the world via the ocean’s trade routes, and plays on the home team's name. The sculpture's "sails" are backboards and hoops inspired by images of diverse courts from around the world, both formal and improvised.

Jennifer Steinkamp "Swoosh" at the Intuit Dome
Jennifer Steinkamp, "Swoosh," 2024. Lights built into the building skin. Commissioned by the LA Clippers for Intuit Dome. Photograph by Iwan Baan.

Jennifer Steinkamp - Swoosh
The Intuit Dome itself is the canvas for Swoosh, a digital artwork by Jennifer Steinkamp. Five animations transform the surface of the dome, weaving fluidly around the structure’s geometric panels and referencing forces of nature such as wind and gravity. As Steinkamp told the New York Times, “We’re pushing the limit here by animating the entire surface. When the Clippers win a game, the building becomes excited.”

Refik Anadol "Living Arena" at Intuit Dome
Refik Anadol, still from "Living Arena," 2024. AI data sculpture. Commissioned by the LA Clippers for Intuit Dome. Photograph by Iwan Baan.
“The inspiration for Living Arena comes from the rich history of the Clippers and their interaction with Los Angeles, using data as pigments to create a dynamic collaboration between AI technology and human creativity.” ~ Refik Anadol

 

Refik Anadol - Living Arena
Bordering the Intuit Dome’s plaza, behind the outdoor community basketball court, stands a new digital artwork by Refik Anadol titled Living Arena, displayed on an LED screen that spans 40 feet tall by 70 feet wide. Created with cutting-edge artificial intelligence algorithms, the work presents a mesmerizing, continually changing data narrative in four chapters:

  • “Urban Dreams” features flight information from LAX and other airports around the globe
  • “Nature Dreams” displays live weather data from Inglewood including wind direction, temperature and humidity
  • “Culture Dreams” showcases player tracking data from historic Clippers games
  • “California Landscape” highlights images from the state’s national parks
Patrick Martinez "Same Boat" at Intuit Dome
Patrick Martinez, "Same Boat," 2024. Neon tubes and hardware. Commissioned by the LA Clippers for Intuit Dome. Photograph by Iwan Baan.

Patrick Martinez - Same Boat
Located across the plaza from Living Arena, Same Boat is a neon sculpture by Pasadena native Patrick Martinez. Inspired by the neon signs of mom-and-pop shops in LA and around the world, Same Boat reproduces a statement by the late Civil Rights leader Whitney M. Young: “We may have all come on different ships but we’re in the same boat now.” And, like Glenn Kaino's Sails, the title of Martinez's sculpture gives a nod to the Clippers nautical team name.

Kyungmi Shin "Spring to Life" at the Intuit Dome
Kyungmi Shin, "Spring to Life," 2024. Stained glass mosaic and waterjet cut stainless steel. Commissioned by the LA Clippers for Intuit Dome. Photograph by Iwan Baan.

Kyungmi Shin - Spring to Life
Located on a wall adjacent to Same Boat, Kyungmi Shin’s Spring to Life is a stained glass mosaic inspired by Centinela Springs, the now-vanished water source in South Los Angeles that once supported the Tongva people and the land they cultivated. Creating a narrative that connects the past to today’s LA, Shin uses stainless steel tracery to superimpose the silhouettes of basketball players - including the late Jerry West - over her depiction of Centinela Springs, suggesting the layers of human experience embedded in the site of the new arena.