What is The Wall at Intuit Dome?+
The Wall at Intuit Dome is a 360-degree perimeter LED display system built into the lower bowl at court level. It wraps all four sides of the court from the floor to approximately 8 feet high and contains over 100 million pixels. During games, it shows live stats, replays, and synchronized animations. During concerts, production teams can use it as part of the stage show. There is nothing like it in any other NBA arena.
What is the Intuit Dome Jersey Wall?+
The Jersey Wall is a dedicated section of The Wall that permanently displays jersey numbers from high school athletes across Southern California. The Clippers honor local student athletes by showing their jersey numbers as a community tribute. High school programs submit jersey numbers through the Clippers organization, and they appear on The Wall display as a rotating permanent fixture.
How big is The Wall at Intuit Dome?+
The Wall contains more than 100 million pixels and runs the full 360-degree perimeter of the court. It is the largest perimeter LED installation in any NBA arena. The display runs floor-to-approximately-8-feet-high continuously around all four sides of the court, covering the scorer's table area, both baselines, and both sideline walls.
Can you see The Wall from the upper deck?+
Upper deck fans can see portions of The Wall and benefit from the ambient glow it creates throughout the arena, but the full immersive experience is designed for the lower bowl. Sections 100 through 135 surround the display at the same level. From the upper bowl (200s), the overhead halo scoreboard is the primary display. The Wall is a lower bowl feature.
Does The Wall show during concerts?+
Yes. The Wall activates for all events at Intuit Dome. For concerts, major touring productions with full visual design packages can incorporate The Wall as part of their stage show, extending visuals around the arena floor. Not every touring act uses it in a custom way, but the LED infrastructure is available and active year-round.
What makes The Wall different from other NBA arenas?+
Most NBA arenas use a center-hung scoreboard above center court as the primary display. Intuit Dome has that scoreboard too, but The Wall adds a second display layer at court level that wraps the entire perimeter. Lower bowl fans are surrounded by video on all sides rather than just looking up at one overhead screen. No other NBA arena has a perimeter display system at this scale.
How do you buy tickets for The Wall section at Intuit Dome?+
The Wall section tickets (sections C1-C4) are sold through the Intuit Dome app and Ticketmaster along with all other Clippers ticket categories. The Wall is a defined seating zone rather than a separate ticket product — you purchase specific seats in sections C1 through C4. These sections sell out faster than most lower bowl seats for marquee Clippers matchups, so buying early is recommended. Prices vary by opponent and game date.
Is The Wall section all-ages?+
Yes. The Wall section is all-ages for Clippers games, the same as the rest of Intuit Dome. Children under 2 on a lap do not require a ticket; all other attendees need a seat. However, The Wall is designed to be loud and participatory — the Clippers encourage energetic fan involvement. It may not be the best environment for very young children who may be overwhelmed by the noise and standing crowd. The Clippers offer quieter family sections elsewhere in the lower bowl.
What should you wear in The Wall section?+
The Wall is a standing, participatory fan section designed for active game attendance. Wear comfortable shoes you can stand in for 2-3 hours. Clippers gear is strongly encouraged — the section is a visual part of the home team's crowd energy and blue or white Clippers jerseys and T-shirts are the standard look. Layers are not needed inside the fully climate-controlled arena, but the section does get warm from crowd density.
How loud is The Wall section?+
The Wall section is the loudest part of Intuit Dome. It was purpose-designed as a standing fan section positioned directly behind the south basket, and the Clippers organization actively encourages chanting, standing, and crowd involvement. Sound levels peak during key game moments and match-day atmosphere events. Earplugs are recommended if you are sensitive to noise. The section is louder than any other NBA fan section and was built with the explicit intent of recreating the atmosphere of intense soccer supporter sections.
Is there food or drinks near The Wall section?+
Yes. The Wall section has its own dedicated concession stands near the south-side entrance used by Wall ticket holders. You can access concessions on the main concourse as well, but the Wall-adjacent stands are positioned for convenience. The Intuit Dome app also supports mobile food ordering with delivery to your seat — though the participatory standing nature of The Wall means most fans prefer grabbing food before the game starts.
Is The Wall section standing or seated?+
The Wall section is bench seating — rows of bench-style seats that pack more fans into the section than traditional theater-style chairs. You can sit, but the expectation throughout the section is that fans stand during active game play. If you prefer to stay seated for most of the game, the rest of the Intuit Dome lower bowl has traditional assigned seats. The Wall is designed for fans who want to be standing and active for the entire game.
What time does The Wall section open at Intuit Dome?+
The Wall section opens at the same time as the rest of Intuit Dome — 90 minutes before tipoff. The Wall has its own dedicated south-side entrance so Wall ticket holders do not need to use the main arena entry gates. Arriving close to door open is recommended for Wall fans who want to get their bench position before the section fills in. The Wall fills quickly for sold-out games.
Can you see the full court from The Wall section at Intuit Dome?+
Yes. From The Wall section you see the full length of the court from baseline to baseline, with an end-on perspective directly behind one of the baskets. You are looking down the court rather than across it, which gives you a different viewing angle than midcourt sideline seats. Free throw attempts at your end are extremely close. The opposite basket and free throw line are the farthest part of the court, but the halo scoreboard overhead provides close-up replays for any action at the far end.