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Because there is no arena without OU basketball.
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Because there is no arena without OU basketball.
It sounds like the private money involved really needs this arena at UNP to make the rest of their proposed development work. It also seems like they want to put very little skin in the game to make the arena itself a reality.
The cornerstone of your development plans being built by mostly public money in order to make the rest of your plans viable.. Pretty good work if you can get it.
Its an entertainment district to be built around the development. This type of development has been going on for years around stadiums and arenas. See (on a much larger scale) the development around the American Airlines Center in Dallas and the new baseball stadium in Arlington.
"and private developers."
Per Lackemeyer - University of Oklahoma President Joe Harroz Jr. was among those supporting the development, which would include a replacement for the Lloyd Noble Center. He said the university would not participate in the development cost but would agree to pay rent for the arena and other venues.
Heikkila confirmed those revenues would be used to support the use of revenue bonds, which are paid from increased revenues from a development.
If the arena gets built with 60% city funds I hope they are smart enough to lock OU into a very long term lease.
Genuinely curious to hear of other ways the city is planning on making money with the arena when it's not in use for OU events?
More watching at home. Same with college football, at a lot of schools. More convenient, cost-friendly, no dealing with traffic, etc. Not every college, but a lot. Most new stadiums aren't going to be bigger. And a lot of renovations take away seating to make the stadiums more fan friendly.
Movie theaters were the first, now stadiums/arenas. Lower general capacities, but increase the experiences with VIP services.
So that's probably where the confusion is. OU itself isn't going to provide squat, but they will with the Foundation. So the university can say they only are paying for their use. Tricky use of words there, but I do think that's the better arrangement honestly. OU doesn't NEED this, so it's a way to get that middle crutch while they figure out what to do for Lloyd Noble, without having to drop millions. Smart thinking for me. The donors are still paying, but its not really coming out of Operations.
Although if the source is Lackemeyer, well, i think everyone here only trusts his comments so far as his own lips. He's notorious for blowing smoke and being wildly inaccurate. Those Friday talks are always a laugh.
Pro arenas and stadiums are on another level than college, when it comes to commercial development around these venues. 20 or less home games with crowds at most of them being just a few thousand versus, for example, the NBA with 41 home games and 10,000-18,000 person crowds.
I'm skeptical this arena will be the catalyst for much development. Theyre just adding things in there that they were either going to do regardless or pie in the sky restaurant and entertainment developments that have no guarantee of happening. A whole lot of lip service, creative math and ambitious plans it what it appears to me.
But I get it, if I was an OU fan and someone was paying for it I'd probably want a new arena too.
But that’s the thing. The “someone” who is paying for the arena is mostly taxpayers. This arena is just a free gift to development speculators to attempt to increase the value of the surrounding property. They want the arena as the cornerstone of their plans but don’t want to pay for it. If so much of the arena is going to be built with public funds, build it near the public university it serves.
The entire point of this project was to get an arena built at UNP with private money because OU couldn’t afford to do it themselves. Now the private money is barely seen for the arena itself and it’s back to Taxpayer money and a chip in from OU to fund the majority of the arena. It doesn’t add up.
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