Las Vegas Sphere to open in East London but here’s the issue…

By Alma Fabiani

Published Oct 3, 2023 at 04:59 PM

Reading time: 2 minutes

By now, you’ve probably seen the countless videos of U2’s insane opening concert at the Las Vegas Sphere, aka the venue set to transform live entertainment as we know it. What you probably didn’t already know, however, is that the $2.3 billion (£1.9 billion) venue is supposed to be getting a replica in Stratford, East London.

The reason no one heard of it in the UK? It’s facing pushback from local residents who say the black-out blinds they have been offered by developers will not make up for the light pollution and nuisance. We can’t really blame them, to be honest.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by SCREENSHOT (@screenshothq)

The giant sphere that towers over the Las Vegas skyline and beams out ultra-bright images—one big eye, a basketball, the moon, you name it—through a skin of thousands of LED screens is distracting, to say the least.

@screenshothq

This INSANE futuristic venue is said to be made up of over 1 million LEDs that can flash any imagery on the outside of the sphere and will seat almost 18,000 people! #lasvegas #vegassphere #vegastiktok #msgsphere #sphere

♬ Murder - Bgnzinho

Following his band’s performance, Bono called the inventor of the Sphere, US mogul James Dolan, a “mad bastard” as 16,000 seamlessly connected screens projected vast desert and extraterrestrial landscapes, swirling animals and kaleidoscopic portals to an understandably mind-blown crowd.

Every single part of the building is wired for sound, with patented technology that can beam pinpoint focussed waves of sound through 167,000 speakers wherever they want in the venue, delivering what critics say is “crystal clear headphone standard audio to every audience member.”

At the same width as the London Eye (120 metres) and rivalling the height of Big Ben (96 metres), the planned arena in London can house 21,500 visitors. The venue, which maker MSG says can host concerts, awards ceremonies, boxing matches and gaming events, was given planning permission in 2022.

That being said, it’s currently still awaiting sign off from London Mayor Sadiq Khan and Michael Gove, the Secretary of State for Levelling Up. According to The Telegraph, MSG has also been given the green light to broadcast adverts around the dome’s facade for the next 25 years.

As awesome as the clips for Las Vegas’ own Sphere look, this East London replica is an unappealing prospect for campaigners from the grassroots group Stop MSG Sphere London. Lindesay Mace, a 44-year-old charity worker and group spokesman, said they were prepared to “fight against it till the last.”

She went on to add: “The fact that where we are now, on the permission being granted, is a travesty of justice. The sphere is designed for Vegas, the city of lights. It is not designed for a small site that is surrounded by three blocks of residential properties.”

Dolan, who built Madison Square Gardens in New York City and whose MSG company owns the basketball team the New York Knicks, is said to have first conceived of the concept of the Sphere seven years ago with a crude sketch showing a stick person stuck inside a circle.

@whatsinside

First look inside The Las Vegas Sphere With U2! This llace is unreal!#sphere #whatsinside

♬ original sound - WHATS INSIDE

Keep On Reading

By Alma Fabiani

Futurist expert predicts that children will soon have more than two biological parents

By Abby Amoakuh

VICE obituary: How Gen Z will remember the millennial digital media titan

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Colombia sterilises first hippo left behind by Pablo Escobar amid ecological disaster

By Louis Shankar

60th Venice Biennale proves that art is rarely, if ever, apolitical

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

QAnon conspiracy theorists claim Iowa shooting was a political coverup for Jeffrey Epstein scandal

By Charlie Sawyer

Michael J. Fox speech at the BAFTA Awards 2024 leaves viewers in tears

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

The Satanic Temple names abortion clinic after Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito’s mum

By Abby Amoakuh

Trump kept a book of Adolf Hitler’s speeches, Ivana Trump reveals

By Emma O'Regan-Reidy

Is the end of Airbnb near? Two subreddits point to an impending flop

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Problematic P Diddy Nickelodeon cameo surfaces following house raids and Quiet On Set documentary

By Charlie Sawyer

Dan Schneider addresses accusations revealed in Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV 

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Grindr sued for allegedly sharing UK users’ HIV status with ad firms

By Emma O'Regan-Reidy

Is BookTok ruining reading? Critics seem to think so

By Abby Amoakuh

Noah Schnapp faces renewed controversy after apology video and defence from Stranger Things co-star

By Abby Amoakuh

Who is Brit Smith, the smaller artist JoJo Siwa allegedly stole Karma from?

By Jack Ramage

Gen Alpha, Gen iPad: What’s the consequence of raising a generation of iPad kids?

By Abby Amoakuh

US election Nostradamus predicts formidable odds for Biden as Trump’s lead narrows

By Abby Amoakuh

Who is Nara Pellman? Meet the Mormon tradwife taking TikTok by storm

By Abby Amoakuh

Influencers are pranking their loved ones by claiming ExxonMobil has invited them on an oil rig brand trip

By Abby Amoakuh

Andrew Garfield is dating a professional witch and the internet can’t handle it