SoFi Stadium
A million-square-foot canopy embedded with 27,000 LED pucks bright enough to be seen from planes descending into LAX.
Coming soon on iOS — be first to walk Los Angeles offline.
Opened in 2020 on the former Hollywood Park Racetrack site, this is one of only two NFL stadiums in the country shared by two teams at once. It has already hosted a Super Bowl, a WrestleMania, and a College Football Playoff title game — and has eight 2026 FIFA World Cup matches plus the 2028 Olympics opening ceremony still ahead.
What to look for
- The 302 translucent ETFE roof panels — 46 of them open to let air through, giving the place a roof but no sealed walls
- The open bowl sides, which create an unusual semi-outdoor feel despite the canopy overhead
- The Kia Forum and Intuit Dome right next door, turning this corner of Inglewood into a three-arena sports campus
Located in Inglewood, a short drive from LAX; on event days the surrounding streets congest quickly, so time your visit accordingly.
SoFi Stadium is one of 33 sights worth the detour in Los Angeles, all bundled offline in Voyage GO — download the Los Angeles pack and it sits on your map with no signal, filling your travel passport the moment you walk past.
More to see in Los Angeles
- Hollywood Walk of Fame2,850 names pressed into pink terrazzo underfoot — actors, inventors, fictional characters, all at six-foot intervals for 1.3 miles.
- Dolby TheatreThe red carpet runs up these stairs every awards season — where Hollywood officially crowns its year.
- Hollywood SignA 1923 real-estate billboard that refused to come down — and ended up owning the word "Hollywood" itself.
- U.S. Bank TowerLA sold the sky above a fire-gutted library to fund its own rebuilding — and got its second-tallest tower in the bargain.
- Rose BowlA century-old sunken oval where the 1994 World Cup Final was settled — and the 2028 Olympics will return to do it again.
- Los Angeles Memorial ColiseumThe only stadium that will have hosted the Summer Olympics three times — and it was commissioned in 1921 as a memorial to Los Angeles veterans of World War I.