Harbor City Sports & Entertainment
EVERY SURFACE BECOMES A MOMENT
Scroll to enter the world ↓
01 · Harbor City Arena
You see it from across the water first — a curve of glass and steel holding its light against the dusk. Harbor City Arena does not announce itself. It glows.
02 · Harbor City Arena
Inside, the building is already an instrument: a 2,400 square foot center-hung voice, a 360-degree ribbon of light, forty-one screens threading the concourse. It has simply never been played as one.
03 · Harbor City Arena
Fourteen and a half thousand people, all looking up at the same moment. That moment is inventory — and right now it is unsold.
04 · Harbor City Arena
The proposal keeps every beam and every sightline. It changes what the surfaces do: one system, one operator, one coordinated story from the gates to the glass.
05 · Harbor City Arena
Under the finish is the part nobody sees — signal routes, processing, redundancy, a control room that runs the building like a broadcast. It is designed to disappear.
06 · Harbor City Arena
A takeover should feel inevitable: one partner, one color, every surface agreeing at once. The building chooses the brand.
07 · Harbor City Arena
Doors open two hours early and the arena wakes in sequence — concourse first, ribbon second, the bowl last, saving its voice for tip-off.
08 · Harbor City Arena
The system is only as good as its worst night. Monitoring, spares on site, a service bench inside the building — the show does not get to fail.
09 · Harbor City Arena
Same bones, entirely new nights: a concert on Friday, a takeover on Saturday, game day on Sunday. One building, three sold-out stories.
14,500
seats
2,400
sq ft center-hung board
360-degree
ribbon system
41
concourse displays
10 · Harbor City Arena
The walkthrough takes forty-five minutes. The impression lasts a season. Book it.
One venue · 7 worlds

Game Day World

Sponsor Revenue World

Behind the Screens

Venue X-Ray

Future Renovation

Concert Conversion

Proposal World
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ANC VenueWorld
Every frame generated from 4 real venue photographs — architecture preserved