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$800m makeover for Arthur Ashe Stadium

Arthur Ashe Stadium will undergo transformation

Image: USTA US Open

The US Tennis Association (USTA) has unveiled plans to reimagine and modernize Arthur Ashe Stadium and create a new, state-of-the-art Player Performance Center.

US Open said the aim of the transformation is to usher in a bold, visionary future for fans, players and partners.

The project is an $800 million investment in the US Open and the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center that is entirely self-funded by the USTA.

The USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center is a stadium complex within Flushing Meadows-Corona Park in Queens, New York City, United States.

It has been the home of the US Open Grand Slam tennis tournament, played every year in August and September, since 1978 and is operated by the United States Tennis Association (USTA). The facility has 22 courts inside its precincts and 12 in the adjoining park.

Image: USTA US Open

Combined with the US Open’s most recent transformation project, completed in 2018, the USTA has invested nearly $2 billion into the US Open and its home facility, without using any public, taxpayer or government funding.

The latest transformation will take shape over three phases and be completed by the 2027 US Open, without interrupting play or fan access for the 2025-26 events.
 
The project will comprehensively enhance and modernize the US Open’s centerpiece, Arthur Ashe Stadium, elevating the experience for all fans inside tennis’ grandest stage. The enhancements include:

 

Image: USTA US Open

The spectator-facing elements of the Arthur Ashe Stadium reimagination will take place in advance of the 2026 and 2027 US Opens.

Lew Sherr, CEO and Executive Director, USTA, said, “The US Open is the pinnacle of sports and entertainment, with the greatest athletes and fans in all of sport, and this reimagination of Arthur Ashe Stadium and construction of a state-of-the-art Player Performance Center will enhance the experience for everyone that comes on site to the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center.

“This project enables us to maintain the greatest stage in tennis—Arthur Ashe Stadium—which was constructed more than 25 years ago, and modernize it in a way that will set it up for the next 25 years. It also provides us the opportunity to give the players that compete in that stadium an unparalleled space that will enable them to perform at their best and enjoy a higher level of luxury and comfort while they are off the court.

“The US Open helps us to deliver on our mission—growing tennis to build healthier people and communities everywhere—by showcasing our sport on the global stage, and this reimagination will bring this presentation to an entirely new level.”

Image: USTA US Open

A state-of-the-art, $250-million Player Performance Center will also be built.

Close to 2,800 players and members of their teams converge on the US Open each year to put on one of the greatest shows in sports.

This reimagination will build them a new, $250 million home that provides today’s and tomorrow’s top athletes best-in-class amenities, with both indoor and outdoor performance and relaxation spaces to give them everything they need to maximize their on-court performance.
 
The two-story, state-of-the-art facility will be built on the top two floors of a four-floor building on the west side of Arthur Ashe Stadium, adjacent to the practice courts. It will include:

 
The new Player Performance Center will be fully completed and accessible for players and teams by the 2027 US Open.
 

World class architects

US Open further stated that the lead architect of the overall reimagination project is ROSSETTI, the architect for the original construction of Arthur Ashe Stadium, as well as the expansive transformation project that was completed in 2018.

ROSSETTI, led by President and CEO Matt Rossetti, conceptualized and designed the Player Performance Center, having created player performance facilities for the Los Angeles Lakers, Green Bay Packers, Miami Dolphins and Jacksonville Jaguars.

To design the new Grand Entrance of Arthur Ashe Stadium, ROSSETTI worked with architect Daniel Libeskind—world-renowned as the master planner and architect for the reconstructed World Trade Center.

For the concepts and design of Ashe’s new club and restaurant spaces, ROSSETTI worked with Garrett Singer, known for designing many of America’s trendiest restaurants and clubs.
 

Three phases

The reimagination project will take place over three phases and be completed by the 2027 US Open, without interruption to scheduled play or fan access for the 2025-26 events.
 

The timeline of construction is as follows:

 

Phase 1 (in advance of the 2025 US Open)

 

Phase 2 (between the 2025-26 US Opens)

 

Phase 3 (between the 2026-27 US Opens)

 
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