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Rams Take Crucial Next Step Toward New Headquarters
Kiyoshi Mio-USA TODAY Sports

The Los Angeles Rams have been back in California for more than seven years, built a new $5 billion stadium, and even won a Super Bowl since returning from St. Louis — but the NFL team is still working to establish more permanent roots.

The Stan Kroenke-owned team continues to press forward on its long-planned development project in Los Angeles’ San Fernando Valley, filing paperwork on an initiative to build a new team training facility and team headquarters in Woodland Hills, California. 

The development — to be built on land assembled through three separate tracts costing a combined $650 million — would incorporate practice fields and offices, as well as restaurants, hotels, and residences.

“Our long-term goal is to build a facility that will include team headquarters and a practice facility in Woodland Hills,” said a team spokesman.

It’s a major step up from the team’s current situation. The Rams practice at a temporary facility at California Lutheran University in Thousand Oaks — nearly 50 miles from SoFi Stadium as opposed to the 30-mile distance between the stadium and Woodland Hills — and now has its business offices in Agoura Hills.

An interim practice facility is projected for a January opening in advance of the larger, permanent phases of construction. The complex, however, isn’t projected to replace the Rams’ staging of training camp at the University of California-Irvine.

The new team headquarters will build on Kroenke’s existing $12.8 billion sports empire that spans his ownership of the Rams, the NBA’s Denver Nuggets, NHL’s Colorado Avalanche, Colorado Rapids in MLS, and the National Lacrosse League’s Colorado Mammoth. 

This article first appeared on Front Office Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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