The 'Singer Bowl' is a
stadium that formerly stood in
Flushing, in the
New York City borough of
Queens. The stadium was built for events during the
1964 World's Fair, also hosting various Olympic trials and concerts over the years.
In the early 1970s, though, the
United States Tennis Association was looking for a new place to host the
U.S. Open as relations with the
West Side Tennis Club in
Forest Hills, which had hosted the tournament, were breaking down. The USTA was initially unable to find a sufficient site, but the association's incoming president, W.E. Hester saw the old Singer Bowl from the window of an airplane flying into
LaGuardia Airport. The old, long rectangular stadium was heavily renovated and divided into two adjacent stadia, becoming
Louis Armstrong Stadium and the adjacent grandstand.