I have to wonder if any single other MAPS project in the history of the initiative have been as successful as the park. Maybe the canal with as much usage as Bricktown has had over the years, but I feel like the park is surpassing that.
I have to wonder if any single other MAPS project in the history of the initiative have been as successful as the park. Maybe the canal with as much usage as Bricktown has had over the years, but I feel like the park is surpassing that.
^
Unless the weather is lousy, the parking spots around Scissortail are full in the evenings and weekends with hundreds of people walking dogs, pushing strollers or just strolling. If you sit on the deck at Social Capital, you'll watch hundred of people go by.
It's very cool to see, especially since this city needs recreation more than anything else.
Not sure I'd agree. Sure, the arena enabled the Thunder to happen as well as concerts and whatnot, but in terms of the public directly being able to use the amenity in question, seeing something at the arena means a paid ticket of some sort, to use the park you just have to get to it. Total gut feeling, but I suspect in terms of the share of the population that might use it over time, or possibly already has, the park potentially wins.
Anecdotes are not data, etc., but as a personal example I have never attended a Thunder game or a concert at the arena, but have visited the park multiple times in the few years it has been complete.
that is a great picture
I hear you. It's just hard for me to not feel the Arena as being a bigger piece in the bigger picture. Obviously the park is awesome, and not even fully finished yet. And on the surface, I don't think there's any doubt the park is better than a simple arena.
But when you consider that no arena means no New Orleans Hornets ever coming to OKC which means no Thunder which means absolutely none of the benefits and growth having an NBA team in the city counts for, Scissortail just doesn't measure up to that.
Basically when I say that I feel that the Paycom Center is a bigger deal, what I'm saying is that having the Thunder here is a bigger deal.
Counter example: I have been to hundreds of games (and several concerts) over 20 years and have been to the park a few times. More importantly, I regularly make trips to Oklahoma to go to Thunder games. I'd certainly never do that for the park.
I'm not saying one is right or wrong. People's experiences are different. But there is absolutely no way that one year of the park has outweighed 20 years of the arena. Thunder have had thousands of games and every one brings between 15,000 to 18,000 downtown.
This picture is awesome! It also shows how much potential there is for development on the north and the east of the Convention Center (which is pretty cool itself) Not to mention the west and the south that is not pictured here. Downtown is going to be so much bigger in 10-20 years.
I don't deny that the arena and the Thunder are the catalyst for a lot of what we have downtown now but.... Thousands of games? Factoring in playoff games I would put that count somewhere around 600 games in their 13 years here..... But hopefully they'll play thousands more here.
Thunder = National and International exposure. The park, not quite so much more than regional exposure possibly..
Do you disagree with my share of the population metric and my estimate of whether the arena or the park will get broader use going by that metric? There's a lot of people in this city who cannot afford to go to hundreds of Thunder games over the years but can afford to take the family to the park for the day.
Why do you have guys have to compete on this? Both are very important for this city. You certainly can argue that a free venue can be used by a wider section of the population, but you can also argue that the PR and intrinsic value of having the Paycom center helps drive a thriving economy that makes paying for things like the park quicker and easier. They can be synergistic. These arguments tend to be focused narrowly and framed for specific points of view.
Folks I think its great that OKC has both the Arena, Canal, and Scissortail Park as relics from MAPS. All are great and would IMO be the top 3 of the program but for different reasons:
Arena is #1 project for OKC national/international exposure. It helped land a major league franchise and has allowed OKC to be featured on television sets during broadcasts. Nothing else has given so much exposure to OKC.
Canal is #1 for creating OKC's first and the state's largest entertainment district. The canal solidified Bricktown into what we see today - a thriving complete district with something for everyone. As Bricktown matures investment has gone into Midtown, AAlley, Film Row, and now Union District - none of this would have been possible IMO without the canal making Bricktown a 'play' for investment proving Downtown is by extension a viable play. Nothing has had as much financial impact to the city as has the canal if you agree with my correlation.
Scissortail Park is #1 for OKC's health, recreation, and socializing. Probably Riversports might come close but there's been no single MAPS project with the unifying effect that the park has brought. During my visits, OKC just felt like a big city with this new park and it was great to have an amenity so close to the CBD. While I personally think Myriad Gardens is even bigger draw with it's maturity and super-interactive focus it isnt a MAPS project so Scissortail (which is also very close) would be the choice from a Maps prospective.
Very nice to have Scissortail Park, Bricktown Canal, and Paycom Arena all in close proximity to MGB, Riversports District, and the CBD. All of these combined with the other districts around the CBD has given our central core lots of amenities and "things to do" so that OKC no longer has the old moniker of "nothing to do in OKC". The big 3 along with the original OKC venues are what makes OKC a burgeoning world class destination. Yes I said it.
Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!
If not for the Thunder (here because of the Ford Center), there might not have been a Maps 3.
The arrival of the Thunder is what got so many people believing in the process. Think about the highs and lows of the canal...how little the library is used...the Thunder was a big ticket item that sold the citizens that this tax could bring big time, positive changes to the city.
yes no doubt the arena and by extension the Thunder has brought a new level of consious for OKC both nationally/internationally and within the city itself. But you can't deny the impact of the other two on the ground-level experience brought to you by MAPS either which has really improved OKC"s quality of life more than anything.
That;s why I think it's a 3-way tie.
Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!
Yeah, this is only going to get nicer as it develops. One of the reasons I harp so much on the park is because of a few visits I have taken to NYC where I spent several hours wandering through Central Park and observed the constant usage by residents and visitors. This is also why the Strawberry fields development needs to be a home run and not The Hill 2.0, we lose out on potential synergy if we don't have population living nearby.
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