The LA28 Olympics organizing committee has relocated its International Broadcast Center from SoFi Stadium in Inglewood to Warner Bros. Ranch in Burbank, a significant logistical shift for the 2028 Games. The move abandons the previous plan to house the broadcast operations at Hollywood Park Studios, the five-stage production facility originally slated for construction adjacent to SoFi.
The decision reflects evolving infrastructure priorities as Los Angeles prepares to host the Summer Olympics for the third time. The Warner Bros. lot offers established soundstage facilities and broadcast infrastructure, eliminating the need to build new structures from scratch. This pivot reduces construction timelines and costs while leveraging existing Hollywood production capabilities that already support major entertainment operations.
The International Broadcast Center serves as mission control for all Olympic coverage distributed worldwide. It coordinates feeds from hundreds of venues, manages commentary booths for dozens of languages, and houses the technical operations that deliver Games footage to broadcasters globally. The facility typically operates around the clock throughout the Olympic fortnight, requiring robust power, networking, and communications systems.
Relocating from Inglewood to Burbank, roughly 20 miles away, reshapes the Games' geographic footprint. SoFi Stadium will still host opening and closing ceremonies plus athletic events. Moving the broadcast hub to an entertainment industry hub aligns with LA's identity as a media production center, though it complicates logistics for broadcasters already planning transportation and accommodation strategies around the stadium complex.
The change underscores how Olympic planning remains fluid, even as the Games draw closer. Infrastructure decisions made years in advance often shift based on construction delays, budget constraints, or operational preferences that emerge during planning phases. The Warner Bros. arrangement capitalizes on private industry resources rather than requiring public investment in temporary facilities, a practical solution that reflects modern Olympic host city strategies.
