YouTube Theater

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Address1011 Stadium Dr
LocationInglewood, California, United States
Coordinates33°57′6″N 118°20′12″W / 33.95167°N 118.33667°W / 33.95167; -118.33667
YouTube Theater
Interior of YouTube Theater in 2022
YouTube Theater is located in the Los Angeles metropolitan area
YouTube Theater
YouTube Theater
Location within the Los Angeles metropolitan area
YouTube Theater is located in California
YouTube Theater
YouTube Theater
YouTube Theater (California)
YouTube Theater is located in the United States
YouTube Theater
YouTube Theater
YouTube Theater (the United States)
Address1011 Stadium Dr
LocationInglewood, California, United States
Coordinates33°57′6″N 118°20′12″W / 33.95167°N 118.33667°W / 33.95167; -118.33667
OwnerKroenke Sports & Entertainment
OperatorStadCo LA
Capacity6,000
TypeTheatre
Public transit C LineK Line Hawthorne/Lennox (via shuttle bus)
Downtown Inglewood station
Construction
OpenedAugust 9, 2021; 4 years ago (2021-08-09)
ArchitectHKS, Inc.
Website
Venue Website

YouTube Theater is a 6,000 seat music and theater venue in Inglewood, California, United States, located under the same structure that houses SoFi Stadium, the home of the National Football League's Los Angeles Rams and Los Angeles Chargers. It is part of the Hollywood Park entertainment complex, a master planned neighborhood in development on the site of the former Hollywood Park Racetrack.

Plans for a 6,000-seat performance venue go back as far as 2015, when Stan Kroenke, owner of the then-named St. Louis Rams, announced his plan to build an NFL stadium and entertainment complex on the former Hollywood Park Racetrack.[1] Construction on the stadium and theater broke ground the following year in November 2016.[2]

On June 28, 2021, it was announced that Google's video-sharing platform YouTube had acquired the naming rights to the theater for 10 years.[3][4]

The venue opened on August 9, 2021, with an official ribbon-cutting ceremony. Mexican rock band Caifanes held the first event at the theater on September 4, 2021.[5][6] The venue hosted its first esports event in late March 2022, with the Rocket League Championship Series (RLCS) Winter Major, marking RLCS's first live event in two years.[7]

Design

References

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