L.A. Live is an entertainment complex in the South Park District of downtown Los Angeles, California. It is adjacent to the Crypto.com Arena and the Los Angeles Convention Center.
L.A. Live was developed by Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG) (which Anschutz is based in and L.A. Live is the flagship of), Wachovia Corp, Azteca Corp, investment firm MacFarlane Partners, and with tax deferments paid by Los Angeles taxpayers. It cost approximately to build. The architectural firm responsible for the master plan and phase two buildings was Baltimore-based RTKL Associates.
With the adjoining Los Angeles Convention Center and Crypto.com Arena, LA Live will be part of the "Downtown Sports Park" cluster for the upcoming 2028 Summer Olympics being held in Los Angeles.
Timeline
Initial construction at L.A. Live began in September 2005. The first phase opened in October 2007 and contained Microsoft Theatre, the Xbox Plaza, a retail plaza, as well as an underground parking garage, holding a fraction of the project's expected total of 4,000 parking spaces.
L.A. Live brought in a renaissance to the neighborhood surrounding Crypto.com Arena and billions in economic activity to downtown Los Angeles. Through the years, the success of LA LIVE! has created mirrored versions or renovations of districts adjacent to sports venues, including TEXAS LIVE in Arlington, Texas, KEMBA Live! at the Arena District in Columbus, Ohio, Kansas City Live! in Kansas City, Missouri, Titletown District in Green Bay, Wisconsin, Patriot Place outside of Gillette Stadium in Massachusetts, and the American Dream Meadowlands near Meadowlands Stadium in New Jersey.
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Explored expansion
In 2020, AEG proposed a $1.2-billion public-private partnership that would add as much as 700,000 square feet to the convention center, which AEG operates, and a $700-million, 861-room addition to the JW Marriott hotel. Plans were approved in 2022. Three years of construction is scheduled. The LA City Council approved the planned expansion of the convention center in September 2025.
For a time prior to the return of the Los Angeles Rams in 2016, Phase IIII plans were being developed for the NFL to return to Los Angeles with a new stadium on the campus, to be called Farmers Field. The Los Angeles City Council approved a non-binding memorandum of understanding (MOU) with AEG in a 12–0 vote on August 9, 2011. AEG abandoned the project in March 2015, after the three most likely NFL teams all proposed their own stadium plans in the event they were to relocate to Los Angeles.
Features
L.A. Live has of ballrooms, bars, concert theatres, restaurants, movie theaters, and a 54-story hotel and condominium tower on a site. The complex became home to AEG and the Herbalife headquarters in 2008.
Event Deck
The west outdoor parking garage, the top-level roof is used as event space, called "Event Deck". The 90,000 square foot roof has no obstruction pilers and can easily accommodate large-scale tents and platforms. It was used for the 63rd Annual Grammy Awards and the 73rd Primetime Emmy Awards during the COVID-19 pandemic as they could accommodate an indoor and outdoor setting for safety protocol. Also used for the world premiers of the Hunger Games franchise and other Hollywood afterparties. The event space can hold up to 5,000 guests.
Peacock Place
Peacock Place (formerly Nokia Plaza, Microsoft Square & Xbox Plaza) is a open-air plaza that serves as the central meeting place for L.A. Live. The Square provides a broadcast venue featuring giant LED screens as well as a red carpet site for special events. The 2022 Major League Baseball All-Star Game red carpet was held at the plaza.
Peacock Theater and The Novo
thumb|220px|right|The completed Peacock Theater (formerly Nokia Theatre & Microsoft Theater) from [[Chick Hearn Court]]
Peacock Theater (previously the Nokia Theatre before June 2015 and Microsoft Theater before July 2023) is a music and theatre venue seating 7,100, and The Novo (previously Club Nokia) is a smaller venue with a seating capacity of 2,300 for live music and cultural events.
The theatre has hosted the ESPY Awards since 2008, as well as the American Music Awards, the Primetime Emmys, the Radio Disney Music Awards, the Billboard Music Awards, and other leading ceremonies serving the entertainment industry.
The venue has also hosted the finale events of American Idol from 2008 to 2014. The 2010 MTV Video Music Awards were held at Microsoft Theater on September 12, 2010.
The first scheduled event held at the Peacock Theater was a concert featuring the Eagles and the Dixie Chicks on October 18, 2007.
Grammy Museum
thumb|225px|The entrance of the [[Grammy Museum at L.A. Live]]
On May 8, 2007, it was announced that the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences would establish a museum dedicated to the history of the Grammy Awards. The museum opened in December 2008 for the Grammy Awards 50th anniversary. It consists of four floors with historical music artifacts. It has featured a number of exhibits, including the John Lennon Songwriter Exhibit, which was open from October 4, 2010, to March 31, 2011.
Embedded on the sidewalks at the LA Live streets are bronze disks, similar to the Hollywood Walk of Fame, honoring each year's top winners, Record of the Year, Best New Artist, Album of the Year, and Song of the Year.
thumb|right|225px|Marriott's Ritz Carlton and J.W. Marriott hotels
thumb|right|225px|L.A. Live at night from [[Figueroa Street]]
Hotels and residences
The centerpiece of the district is a 54-story, 1,001-room two-hotel hybrid tower, constructed above the parking lot directly north of the Crypto.com Arena. The tower's architectural design evolves from a "geometric pattern of glittering, blue-tinted glass." Thirty-four different types of glass were installed to create the uniquely patterned facade. Groundbreaking for the tower took place in June 2007. In 2025, plans were filled by AEG for a 49-story tower with 364 residences and 334 hotel rooms. The building, which would also include restaurants and bars, would be built across Olympic Boulevard from L.A. Live on a corner lot on Georgia Street.
ESPN broadcasting studios
The second phase of development included a ESPN broadcasting studio, as well as an ESPN Zone restaurant built on the corner of Figueroa Street and Chick Hearn Court. In an effort to expand coverage of West Coast sports, ESPN began broadcasting the 1 AM ET (10 PM PT) edition of SportsCenter from the studio on April 6, 2009. The ESPN Zone restaurant closed in July 2013 and was replaced by Tom's Urban 24, Smashburger and Live Basil Pizza restaurants.
Regal Cinemas
The $100 million, , Regal Entertainment Group movie complex opened in 2009 and includes 14 screens and 3,772 seats. It includes a three-story art-deco-style atrium and an 806-seat theater called the "Regal Premiere House" intended for "lucrative" premieres.
Construction gallery
<gallery class="left" widths="175px" heights="175px">
File:LA Live Construction May 2007.jpg|L.A. Live during Construction
File:LA LiveTower05.jpg|The hotel on Olympic Blvd. under construction in November 2008
File:RitzCarlton.jpg|The completed Ritz Carlton Residences at LA Live
File:Only the pics from L.A 336.jpg| Regal Theater and Marriott under construction summer of 2008.
</gallery>
See also
- List of tallest buildings in Los Angeles
- Wilshire Grand Center
- Crypto.com Arena
- Oceanwide Plaza
- TCW Tower
- Grand Avenue Project
- Ovation Hollywood
- Dolby Theatre
- Park Fifth Towers
- List of music venues in Los Angeles
References
External links
- L.A. Live official website
- Peacock Theater website
- Smarter Places: RTKL architects
- The Residences at The Ritz-Carlton, Los Angeles
- Los Angeles Sports Council
- Staples Center official website
