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a full stadium bowl at the USC LA Memorial coliseum on game day
University of Southern California

Preserving an Icon for Future Victories

Project Location

Los Angeles, CA

Project

Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum

Area

1,000,000 SF

Award

LA Business Council, 2019 Under Construction Design Award

The Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum was built in 1923, and the USC Trojans played their inaugural game on October 6, 1923. Since then, it’s also hosted two Olympics, two Super Bowls, a World Series, a Papal Mass, visits from three U.S. Presidents, and scores of additional sporting and social events. We led the design of a $300-million and modernization encompassing well over 1,000,000 total square feet to honor the tradition and heritage of the historic facility while reinventing the game-day experience for fans.

A focal point of the modernization is the design and construction of a new suite and press tower on the south side of the stadium that added multiple suites, loge boxes, club seats, press box, and a new concourse. This new suite tower was inserted seamlessly into the existing stadium bowl. The Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum is one of four historic athletic stadiums designated as National Historic Landmarks by the National Park Service. The design retains the Coliseum’s official landmark status while also being sensitive to the place the coliseum plays in the culture of Los Angeles and the United States. The modernized Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum retains the historic coliseum look, texture, and impression, and a key design intent was to faithfully restore the iconic peristyle’s former majestic presence.

Modernization

The stadium has seen changes over the years to accommodate updated uses and seismic strengthening; however, the basic design configuration, including its complex geometric footprint, curved peristyle, and primary concrete structure have remained the same since 1923. The Coliseum is a State Historical Landmark, and was designated as a National Historic Landmark when listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. The $315 million renovation updated the facility while restoring its iconic historic elements. It re-opened to professional and collegiate football in August 2019.

01
Preservation

Enhancing History and Experience

The design maintains the historical integrity of the Coliseum by preserving its most recognizable feature – the east end zone peristyle, in addition to the entire perimeter enclosure and shape of the seating bowl. A new seven-story tower is embedded seamlessly into the upper half of the south seating bowl and features premium event viewing for patrons, open concourse views to the field, extensive press facilities, and social and event spaces for use 365 days per year. Additional improvements throughout the facility include upgraded game entertainment systems for fan enjoyment including new scoreboards; an improved sound system; and enhanced cellular service and Wi-Fi coverage of the entire stadium and site. To upgrade fan comfort, areas of the seating bowl have been renovated to provide more leg room, wider chairs, additional aisles for easier access and handrails in all aisles for safety. Every seat in the stadium now has a new armchair.

02
Addition

Inserting the Scholarship Tower

In past renovation studies, consideration was given to locating the addition behind and above the stadium, reaching out over the seating bowl. This approach would have covered up 30% of the façade, been five stories taller than the existing high point of the stadium and put the premium seating 90 rows from the field. By locating the addition within the seating bowl, we removed only 17% of the historic structure, kept seating close to the field, and allowed the entirety of the perimeter Coliseum walls to be maintained in their original condition. The design solution built the Scholarship Tower around the existing frames and isolated the tower from them, not needing the old structure to resist the new structure but using the new one to offload the old one. In the event of an earthquake, the Tower would sway independently of the concrete structure which surrounds it.

03
Welcome

Founders Club

The design concept centered around a confluence of the historic character and USC brand with an influence of Hollywood Regency-era vocabulary from 1923, the year the Coliseum was built. Carrera marble walls, gold and bronze accents, warm wood tones with distinct graining, and a subtle touch of the USC cardinal and gold accents create a sense of pageantry as visitors move through spaces.

04
Amenities

Guest Concourse

Enhanced seating options include the Trojan Athletic Fund seating which replaced every seat in the stadium bowl and installed handrails throughout; adding aisles and repairing steps to enhance safety. The design intervention widened seats and increased leg room in many sections; upgraded entry concourses, installed new field and stadium lighting, improved audio and video with two new large screens on the east end of the stadium; updated Wi-Fi throughout the venue; and updated electrical, and mechanical and plumbing systems. A new concourse provides up-scale food offerings.

The USC Trojans and LA Rams played the 2018 season in the Coliseum during the renovation.

A new concourse takes a building designed in the 1920s for the singular focus of giving a fan a seat in a bowl and redefines a modern, game-day experience.

05
Expression

Lou Galen Club

The design built the Scholarship Tower around the old concrete and isolated the tower from it, not needing the old structure to resist the new structure, but using the new one to offload the old one. The old tower, then, acts as an island in the middle of the bigger tower. Everywhere around it, slide-bearing connection joints maintain up to 9 inches of space, allowing the old and new towers to move independently from each other. This also allowed engineers to design the new portion to requirements of modern code without imposing that code on the historic portion. “The existing structure of the stadium is maintained in place, expressing it in the club lounge,” Barnum says. “People should recognize it as the stadium structure.”

the lou galen club features the USC brand color palette and raw concrete from the stadium bowl

Finishes in the Lou Galen club feature the USC brand color palette and concrete from the stadium bowl.

pendant lighting hanging between concrete bracing in front of floor to ceiling glass

The existing structure of the stadium is maintained in place, recognizable as the stadium structure.

06
Suites

A New Game-Day Experience

Scholarship Tower holds Founders Suites on two levels; 1,100 club seats and 24 loge boxes with lounge access; and 26 upper suites; and a rooftop terrace. The addition creates a memorable guest experience through added amenities, breathtaking sightlines, upscale finishes, and overall prestige.

a private suite with a kitchen and operable wall at the USC LA Memorial Coliseum

Custom graphics tell the story of USC’s storied history and decorated athletes.

loge level seating at USC LA Memorial Coliseum

Each floor of the tower has a different use.

07
Rooftop

1923 Club

Topping off Scholarship Tower is the 1923 Club, a rooftop terrace that offers field views and 360-degree panoramas of Los Angeles. Custom graphics tell the stories from this historic location. Guests are treated to visually impactful stories and graphics of the USC Trojans accomplishments, significant Coliseum events, and historical Los Angeles moments.

custom wall graphic engraved with 1923 club

The rooftop level is named for the year the Coliseum was originally opened.

rooftop view of downtown los angeles at dusk over the USC LA Memorial coliseum from the 1923 club

The 1923 Club offers views of the playing field, and the downtown Los Angeles skyline.

Renovating the LA Memorial Coliseum

Press

In the Media

Preserving an Icon for Future Victories Los Angeles, CA
Popular Mechanics

Rebuilding History: Modernizing the L.A. Memorial Coliseum

August 20, 2019

Read the details of our design strategy for 235,000 new square feet of space in the existing Coliseum, without eliminating the historic feel of a bowl originally built in a park or altering the building’s famed façade.

Read More
Preserving an Icon for Future Victories Los Angeles, CA
The Architect's Newspaper

The Los Angeles Coliseum Undergoes a Monumental Renovation

September 3, 2019

The recent renovation of the 96-year-old building, completed this year to the tune of $315 million, is the most comprehensive yet.

Read More

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