NFL Stadium

Email Print Twitter Facebook MySpace Stumble Digg More Destinations

L.A. City Council approved the construction of a $1.2 billion NFL stadium

LOS ANGELES, Calif. - To cheers and high-fives, the Los Angeles City
Council today gave final approval for the construction of a $1.2 billion NFL
stadium and a new $315 million convention center hall, stand-alone ballroom and
new park plaza in downtown L.A.
The council approved the deal on a 12-0 vote. Union construction
workers, high school football teams and business groups packed the chamber to
support the deal.
A handful of residents and low-income housing advocates urged the
council to oppose the deal, citing the potential for major traffic problems,
air pollution and other negative effects from the project that critics say have
not been addressed.
The green light for Anschutz Entertainment Group to build the 76,000-
seat stadium and convention center upgrade can only begin if the sports and
entertainment company gets a football team to move to L.A.
The council's sign-off, which needs the signature of Mayor Antonio
Villaraigosa, who supports the project, is expected to trigger a fierce
competition between AEG and Majestic Realty Co., which has approval to build a
football stadium in the city of Industry, to lure one or possibly even two
teams to play in the area.
A team transfer would have to be approved during a meeting of National
Football League owners, with the next meeting scheduled for March after the
current season ends. The Southland has been without an NFL team since 1994,
when the Raiders moved to Oakland and the Rams moved from Anaheim to St. Louis.
The council vote came one week after billionaire investor Philip
Anschutz announced he was putting AEG, which owns Staples Center and L.A. Live,
up for sale.
AEG President Tim Leiweke apologized to city leaders for the bombshell
announcement, but maintained it was better for the news to come out before the
council voted.
Leiweke said the Rams and Raiders left Los Angeles in 1994 because of
the lack of a good stadium. He said AEG would build a world-class stadium that
would be the most environmentally friendly stadium in the NFL.
``If you build a great home, they will come and they will win
championships,'' Leiweke said.
He also stressed that the project would not require taxpayers to foot
the bill for the project. ``This is a 100 percent privately financed football stadium, and the
taxpayers and the general fund will never be at risk. You have our word on that
and it's in the agreement,'' Leiweke told the council.

Related Articles

  • Downtown Los Angeles streetcar study -

    LOS ANGELES, Calif.—A proposed streetcar system in downtown Los Angeles would create 9,300 jobs and generate about $47 million for the city, according to a study released today by supporters of the project.

    "The Los Angeles streetcar will have an incredible return with major benefits for Los Angeles—over $1.1 billion in new development and thousands of new jobs,'' according to Tim Leiweke, president and CEO of AEG, the owner of Staples Center and the company pushing for an NFL stadium in downtown Los Angeles.

  • Thousands fill streets to march for May Day -

    Energized by the possibility of immigration reform, thousands of demonstrators marched through downtown Los Angeles Wednesday taking part in May Day rallies aimed at pressing Congress to enact legislation ending deportations.

    A massive rally organized by about 20 community groups began around midday at Olympic Boulevard and Broadway, then ended up three hours later at La Placita Olvera on North Main Street. A second march took place along largely the same route a few hours later.

  • Nicki Minaj, Rihanna top American Music Award nominations -

    Nicki Minaj and Rihanna each earned four nominations today for the 40th American Music Awards, putting them atop the pack of hopefuls, while Justin Bieber, Drake, Maroon 5, Usher and One Direction each earned three.

    Minaj and Rihanna were both nominated for favorite female pop/rock artist, along with Kelly Clarkson and Katy Perry. Rihanna and Perry also received nods for artist of the year, as did Bieber, Drake and Maroon 5.

  • Expo Line’s first phase: from downtown to the westside -

     When the much-anticipated opening of Phase 1 of the Exposition Light Rail Line occurs on Saturday, patrons will experience a fast, convenient and comfortable ride from downtown Los Angeles to Culver City, and vice versa, without the dreaded inconvenience of Los Angeles transportation—traffic.

    Whether the destination is Downtown, the Staples Center, the University of Southern California, the County Natural History Museum, or the Crenshaw District, the Exposition Rail Line will put you right in the mix.

  • L.A. civil-rights and community groups to hold rally and march for Trayvon Martin -

    LOS ANGELES, Calif.—Members of various civil-rights and community groups plan to hold a rally and march in downtown Los Angeles today demanding justice for Trayvon Martin, who was fatally shot in Florida by a neighborhood watch captain who has not been arrested.

    Marchers will gather at 4 p.m. at Pershing Square, at Fifth and Hill streets, and begin walking to City Hall at 6 p.m. for a rally on the west side of the building at First and Spring streets, according to the ANSWER Los Angeles Coalition.

  • Support/Volunteer Opportunities

    The following numbers can be contacted for drug and alcohol assistance. 

    Alcoholics Anonymous (323) 936-4343 
    Cocaine Anonymous (310) 216-4444 
    Narcotics Anonymous (323) 933-5395 
     
    LA Treatment Facilities          
     
    AV Treatment Facilities