Re: City leaders visit Denver
I lived in Denver also, when LoDo was just starting out (mid 1990s).
I sent an email to city leaders and suggested OKC model itself after successful mid-sized cities like Denver and Portland (similar population to OKC but a bit more progressive/successful). I wonder if my suggestion caused them to consider this trip??
Irregardless, I am happy to hear about the trip and hope that the take-aways that they gain will add to the continued Renaissance of Downtown OKC and the inner city.
Who knows, we might just have that Frontier City/White Water combined park somewhere along the OK River (for those who dont know, Elitch's Gardens was relocated to downtown Denver near the Auraria area after being constricted in the suburb of Arvada).
but yes, 16th Street is O.K., downtown itself is nice, the neighbourhoods that feed from downtown are awesome (I lived in Uptown/17th Street myself), LoDo is a jewel - especially with Coors Field as the centerpiece [I was there during construction and completion, LoDo was JUST getting momentum].
Lots of lessons OKC can learn about mass transit also. Denver started with a one line light rail (around early 1990s). They had this one line for years, but expanded a bit and another bit until around 2000 it went almost the entire length of the city and now into the southern suburb of Littleton. the city recently completed another line which follows I-225 and they have other lines going everywhere! Denver prevailed because they owned the right-of-way, which Im sure OKC should be similar.
Lest I forget, DIA. I was there when it was being turned-up. I was one of the managers responsible for the telecommunications/fiber at the time. What we can learn from that is - we need to finish the WRWA East Concourse. We need to turn the airport into an asset, complete with shopping and 'more' OKC food options, and not JUST a 'nice' drop-off point or city entry base that it is today. although I think DIA was a bit overboard (like that had to scale back the concessions because it was WAY TOO MUCH), Denver built an expandable airport which is the primary showcase of the city (if not state).
In general, to me - Denver thinks BIG. Denver doesn't care that it isnt Chicago or SF, Denver will still get it. Why do you think Denver is the smallest city to have all major-league sports (NFL, MLB, NBA, NHL, MLS) and state-of-the-art facilities for each? It does help to have little competition in the Rocky Mountain region - true, but I hope if nothing else OKC leaders learn how to THINK BIG when take away lessons from Denver.
In many ways, Denver is BIGGER and has MORE than Seattle does - although Seattle/Tacoma is a significantly larger metropolis. ...
Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!
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