Re: Mayor's annual Development Roundtable
well said Metro. I totally agree that OKC is probably the last major city in America to develop a full convention facility. Other cities are renovating theirs - but they already have one.
Again, I am speaking of MAJOR cities - which OKC is in the club for the last 15 years. So, OKC needs to have the BASIC infrastructure that big cities have. OKC has some catching up to do - and I see that is what MAPS 3 (and maybe even MAPS 4) will be - catch up.
After OKC has the transit, pedestrian focus, airport, convention centre, arena, sports facilities/stadium(s), community centres, etc - that peer big cities have or better; then OKC will always be the BEST little city and Worst big city.
Compared to OKC former peers (Tulsa, Little Rock, Omaha, ABQ, etc), OKC is tops in almost every category. But, compared to OKC's NEW peers (Denver, Seattle, Ft Worth, Austin, SAT, Portland, Baltimore, Indy) - OKC in most ways is at or near the bottom. This is what needs to change and OKC needs another huge injection (or two) to really get the BIG CITY momentum so that it will never return to Tier III.
Again, OKC has made HUGE steps so far and definitely is in the Tier II club - nobody can argue against that. BUT - most will argue OKC is barely a member and without some more public investment; it will continue to be difficult to convince national investment to take a risk on Oklahoma City.
Again - I think Portland, OR is Oklahoma City's mentor since there are many significant similarities; OKC is about 15 years behind Portland in many areas - but I think back at PDX then and it is where OKC is now, on the verge (today, Portland is a very solid Tier II city; despite HUGE competition with Vancouver, Seattle, and San Fran - all three MUCH larger and even world class in vancouver and sf)
Portland holds a certain niche and does very well at it. OKC has similar competition close by, OKC needs to find that niche market that Dallas can not serve - and do as Portland, serve it well and own it.
At the same time, I do hope there is a significant Transit component to MAPS III along with the major convention center and some city wide IMPACT projects. I hope the transit is minimum: downtown streetcar (whose initial route covers all of the existing districts, maybe also tie to the OHC), possible commuter rail {if the state/feds also come on}, major overhaul on the city bus (again - see Portland!!!), implementation of Express Bus to the suburbs, and 'solid plans' for light rail.
I don't think OKC is there yet for light rail - ridership would be way too low. But OKC IS ready for the downtown streetcar and even some extension of it into the inner city. That would help build a very solid core - which would also bring major employment downtown; which starts to develop the need for commuter rail to the suburbs and light rail in inner/outer OKC.
In fact, I think OKC could do commuter rail now in the Norman/Edmond corridor - but we could start with Express/Commuter Bus if the feds/state does not come on board with commuter rail (they may not, they may want 'proof' with successful Commuter Bus first).
As long as this is in MAPS III - and we have some tangible transit that is needed now and tangible plans for the future once funding become available; I don't see why it would not pass no matter what else is included.
I do agree that if OKC had a major convention center - OKC would have it booked nonstop; because OKC does have a niche that Dallas can not serve - so capitalize on that and do it right - and do it well.
Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!
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