The Wall at Intuit Dome: Key Facts
What Is The Wall?
The Wall at Intuit Dome is a 360-degree perimeter LED display system built into the lower bowl at court level. It replaces the traditional flat advertising boards seen along the sidelines and baselines of most NBA arenas with a seamless, full-height LED canvas that runs the entire court perimeter — from the scorer's table to the baselines and back around the other side.
The system contains more than 100 million pixels, making it one of the highest-resolution arena installations anywhere in professional sports. During Clippers games, The Wall runs live stats, instant replays, sponsored animations triggered by scoring runs, and pre-game and halftime show visuals synchronized to court-level performances.
During concerts, event production teams at Intuit Dome have access to The Wall as an additional video canvas. Major touring productions with full visual design packages can activate it as part of their stage show, extending visuals around the arena floor in a way no other venue can replicate.
The Intuit Dome Jersey Wall
The Jersey Wall is a dedicated section of The Wall where the Clippers organization permanently honors high school athletes from Southern California. Jersey numbers from local high school sports programs are displayed as a tribute to student athletes and their communities.
The Clippers have emphasized community connection since announcing the move from Staples Center to Inglewood. The Jersey Wall is a physical expression of that mission built into the arena's main display system. High school jersey numbers are submitted through the Clippers organization and appear on The Wall as a rotating permanent fixture throughout every event.
Unlike most arena sponsorship and advertising content that changes constantly, the Jersey Wall section maintains a consistent tribute identity. If you have a connection to Southern California high school athletics, this feature gives the arena a local identity that standard NBA venues do not have.
The Wall Experience by Where You Sit
The Wall vs. Traditional NBA Scoreboards
Most NBA arenas use a center-hung scoreboard suspended above center court. Fans look up and inward to watch replays and stats. Intuit Dome has that overhead scoreboard too — the halo scoreboard that wraps the crown of the arena — but The Wall changes the experience for everyone in the lower bowl.
Instead of looking up at one overhead screen, lower bowl fans at Intuit Dome are surrounded by video at their own level. The effect is more like sitting inside a full-stadium video wrap than watching a traditional arena scoreboard. The court itself looks different because the perimeter is an active display rather than flat advertising boards.
No other NBA arena has a perimeter display system at this scale. The Clippers designed Intuit Dome without a second tenant, which meant every design decision could be optimized for their specific vision. The Wall is the clearest example of what that single-purpose design philosophy produces.