The city isn't a corporation. Considering the history of cost overruns in government projects, l think it would be smart to build in inflation expectations and change order costs - then apply any possible unused revenue to other capital projects. Its better than having to whittle down what is planned and sold to the public end end up with a disappointing facility.
I guess what I am trying to say is, the Thunder leadership has decided they need to forecast some “spec revenue” to remain viable in the NBA. That “spec revenue” is going to come from additional suites, new seating opportunities, potential restaurants and other new revenue streams. Anytime a corporation the size of the Thunder decides they want to forecast increased revenue there are models built and several rounds of scrutiny with a board etc…. So they build a model that says we need a xxx,xxx sq ft arena in order to build xx types of revenue streams. Within the P/L will be each line item and the speculative revenue generated from those speculative ventures. That gives them an idea of what they can forecast on net revenues when payroll, operations, and other expenses start to increase.
They didn’t just meet with Mayor Holt and tell him we’re roughly thinking $900M and what do you think about these 3-4 site locations. There is a throughly vetted plan that is most likely built on speculation but we’re not privy to that even though the city will incur the costs. That’s my belief
SouthOKC. You are driving me crazy internet friend. We all agree we'd love to have renderings and, I think, most believe that some placeholder renderings do exist to show how an arena might fit on a plot of land such as the Cox Convention Center site. But, I think we all also agree that the actual architectural renderings of what we might get (not a placeholder 10 min CGI creation) are what is important to see, right?
If the aforementioned is correct, then please, tell me which of the follwoing statement is untrue:
1) The City is going to own the arena.
2) The City is going to fund the arena, along with a small contribution from Thunder owners *if* the new Arena passes.
3) The City's own rules state that they cannot spends funds they have not yet allocated.
4) A vote will be forth to continue taxation levels of past MAPS as necessary to activate the Arena building funding, thereby continuing the lease.
If all of those statements are independently agreed, then what the heck are you on about. If something there is outright incorrect, let's discuss it in a vacuum and have those who know more shed light.
Imagine this hypothetical scenario: The evil greedy Thunder owners are holding the leaders of OKC hostage by telling them that the only way the Thunder stays is to build a new billion dollar arena. The evil Thunder owners demand that the City show them completed architectural renderings of their Arena offering, lest they walk away from the table. The City pays for the renderings, out of fear of losing the Thunder. The payment and the renderings are made public. The Jo Beth Hamons and the SouthOKCs of the world cry foul, stating that the City has violated it's own bylaws in spending money from *previously taxed resources* which was not agreed to and voted on by the People. The People are outraged, feeling betrayed, and decide to vote down the Arena.
If you think the "billion dollar franchise" has paid some money for their own renderings of what they want the City of OKC to build, wouldn't you agree that they would never make that public lest it appear that the City is truly only a servant of the Thunder's wishes??
My bad not my intention to drive you mad..lol
I enjoy the discussion and debate perhaps the tone is lost via internet message board posts.
Personally, I think it’s too important to the future of OKC to not pass this vote. I don’t feel like the Thunder owners are evil but greedy is all about perception. I appreciate Clay Bennett and everyone involved to bring the Thunder to OKC and believe they genuinely want the city to thrive.
I think your last sentence sums it up for me…if you’re requesting the city build a $900M+ arena for you as the primary tenant then we deserve to see what you’ve got in mind. In some sense the future financial success of the Thunder is pertinent to public’s investment. Show us how you plan to not to default on the next 25 years of the lease. You’d like a larger building then show us why and how you’re going to grow revenue with that building.
I think we are on the same page.
I hope our new Arena, if it passes, involves some highly creative and even loud architectural stylings. I'm sure there are plenty who want something totally different.
I suspect that if there are architectural renderings already created they are not showing them for fear of the naysayers drowning out the supportive commentary. Heck, 90% of the time anything is announced on social media the Facebook comments are so toxic I can't help but wonder if they come from real people. It's almost astounding.
... AND, this happens almost all of the time. Proposals get value engineered or even bait and switch - that's the OKC way. But the thing is, NOTHING ever got voted/approved without some sort of rendering - whether it was too-good-to-be-true or conceptual to justify cost/TIF.
We're so far seeing NONE of this with the arena, which for me leaves a sour taste - particularly since its the largest project in OKC history.
Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!
For comparison, the Convention Center came in at <$300M. FiServ is ~715k sq ft and convention center ~500k sq ft. Obviously an arena is going to cost more to build per sf and this will also involve cost of capital which we didn't have with MAPS (although, building costs also are easier to predict with this project because the distance between vote and construction is significantly less.)
Pete's very reasonable math puts total collections north of $1.3B and all of that is going to be forced to the arena.
This is why, for me, I need to know what else is included in this arena besides an arena. PBC and the Mayor both know that the number we're floating is WAY under a reasonable assessment. That is probably the most cheeky thing about how this has been proposed. It's an easy way for PBC to hedge their bets at the cost of the city.
Question for all those that might know: what would the cost of removing the old cox convention center (Prairie Surf Media) cost, roughly? $1,000,000? $5,000,000? $10,000,000?
So you’re saying someone with enough money and a considerable financial interest could consult with an architectural firm? The ability to pay for it would be all that’s needed? No formal voting process would be required? No funding appropriation?
That’s a great point. I wonder who might benefit from taking such an action? It would have to be someone that could afford to lose the fees required in case the project didn’t pan out. Most likely someone that had an imminent plan and really needed understand the financial implications prior to requesting such a project be started.
I’d almost prefer they tell me the general public is being left in the dark than believe they have no plans at this point in the game. If the mayor hasn’t seen something more formal in terms of plans for a potential arena you really have to question if he’s operating in good faith on behalf of the city.
I think even if we dont have some rendering of what the outside is going to look like, they do already have an idea of what some of the inside features would be. Meaning, how many decks and how many levels of suites. Are they one on top of the other, do they include slouge (sp?) boxes?
Somewhere, i thought i saw that the intent was to create an entire second level of suites? Am i making that up? If that's the case, there are multiple options with this, so they may not have nailed one down. Meaning, do they go like some NFL and stack them? Do they put some on the floor level again like NFL (i dont think they can with the expandable seating), do they put one at the bottom/top of each deck. How many decks this time? 3 or 4?
There are only so many ways to make an oval here. BUUUUT, you can get pretty danged creative in 3-D with that oval. And what's outside that oval in terms of concourses for the ameneties....well, that's where a LOT of money comes in. Concessions, restaurants, shops, etc. I almost think they could get away with not having much of an idea on the exterior right now, if they could just get us some inside specs with even a very rough rendering of the CONCEPT.
They most likely have a general requirements document... square feet, number of general seats, number of suites, number of loge seats, electronic requirements, retail sq ft, media area size and infrastructure, loading and storage area requirements, truck and bus areas, locker rooms sizes, dressing and other green room areas sizes, vip parking area, etc., etc. And, they will have a general spec for quality of finishes, etc. All that would allow them to get a very rough estimate of costs. But, that doesn't really give them any form or layout info to do real renderings that would represent much more than gross size.
Was reminded of it the other day but taxpayers put in about $15 million for the Thunders private practice facility. Which is definitely one of the weirder things taxpayers pay for in regards to having a pro sports team, their private practice facilities. Theres no public or economic benefit with those taxpayer dollars. Deduct that out of the $50 million thunder ownership is putting up and its even smaller percentage of the new arena.
I mean they know how to do it…https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle...-renton-venue/
We know Clay was *cough cough* “possessed” to keep the team in Seattle per emails to Aubrey and Tom Ward. However, he just had to give way to OKC that was much more cooperative in accommodating the team.
So all we’re saying is we want this as much as they do, let us in on the plan. Especially, if you’re pushing through a financial plan to contribute next to nothing.
OKC owns it and rents it out. So, again, you're not wanting to have facts ruin your good story.
Either way, it doesn't travel. It stays here, no matter what, so it is not an asset they can use in their calls for gains. Not sure if you are serious with this one. OKC can do with it what they please if the Thunder leave.
But OKC owns it, and it isn't an asset of the Thunder, in terms of boosting their value. if the Thunder leave, this can easily be turned into a public rec center or after-school facility, and therefore it serves multiple purposes.
$100k is more than enough to cover property taxes and stuff. Team pays utilities and such.
And again, I am not sure how the arena inflates their value. If the prospective owners are planning to move the team, they won't give a rat's behind about the new arena. They will piss all over the current owners trying to include it in negotiations.
So if the new owners are truly wanting to move, then the new arena hurts the owners more than helps, IMO (having been in on negotiations like this).
^^ If the language of the vote does not explicitly give the city the ability to reallocate funds for this, we're potentially tying up an incredible amount of funds on this project. Having a $50M little egg once we finish would be meaningful and strategic (though the arena creates revenue that should be able to sustain operations/standard maintenance of said arena). Having >25% of project costs stashed away is fiscal irresponsibility that the city should not stand for.
The more I think about it is anyone else thinking the ownership should keep their $50M contribution? In what will almost assuredly exceed $1.3B in cost it amounts to an immaterial amount. My preference would be for the city to limit the amount of say Thunder ownership has in the arena. When you have 0 negotiating power outside of walking away from the deal you have to press for accountability where you can get it.
Also, something else I find interesting is we haven’t really heard much from Clay Bennett at least that I can find. As much as I like/trust Holt he kinda comes off like the mouthpiece for Bennett. It’s on brand for the Thunder they def employ the strategy of not giving the public any information that allows anyone to form an opinion.
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