cant tell if Andrew is serious, i thought people in Dallas hated that thing
cant tell if Andrew is serious, i thought people in Dallas hated that thing
From the gazette:
Whitewater facility speeds Oklahoma River’s transformation
A dusty field off the Oklahoma River will soon be one of the world’s premier whitewater rafting facilities.
It might be hard to imagine but isn’t hard to believe, especially when the city has transformed what was little more than a sewage pool several years ago into a sparkling water course for kayaks, canoes and other water sports.
City leaders broke ground on the whitewater facility, which will officially be called Riversport Rapids, last week. Unlike other Metropolitan Area Projects (MAPS) that helped the city build on assets it already had, the Boathouse District and the whitewater course create something new for locals.
“I grew up in a city where we had this big ditch and the grownups called it a river,” Mayor Mick Cornett said, referring to the Oklahoma River. “We are indebted to the generation ahead of me to have the vision to see what could happen here.”
A metamorphosis
The growth means OKC is now a hub for American rafting, kayaking and canoeing. The city is home to more than state-of-the-art facilities used by world- class athletes; it’s also home to a growing amateur rowing community.
“I don’t know of any other city in the country that has this many rowing leagues where you have law firms and banks and various companies that come down and row against each other,” said Rick Adams, chief of Paralympic sport and national governing body organizational development for the United States Olympic Committee. “This is a model for what we love to see replicated across the country.”
The city moved quickly to begin whitewater center construction in an effort to win a bid for 2016 Olympic rowing trials, an event that has been held in New Jersey for several years.
“I would say [Oklahoma City] has emerged well beyond the radar,” Adams said. “It’s an important partner. It’s a city that has really shown an incredible interest and resolve in terms of supporting Olympic sport, and that is a big deal.”
Although a trials location is still being considered, Olympic officials cite OKC as a frontrunner.
More Olympic expansion
USA Canoe/Kayak, the national governing body for the sport, moved its headquarters to OKC in 2011. It is the only Olympic sport with its headquarters in Oklahoma.
“When you are paddling with raids, your goal is to align your boat with as much momentum as possible,” said Joe Jacobi, CEO of USA Canoe/ Kayak. “As an organization, it’s our job to put our organization around the most momentum as possible and look at what’s happening here in Oklahoma City. This is what you want to be around when your goal is to win Olympic medals.”
When completed in 2016, the $45 million facility will be open to professional athletes and the public. Course bridges and pathways also will be open to the public, along with a restaurant that overlooks the rapids.
Riversport Rapids will complement the established Boathouse District, which is home to rowing training facilities, a fitness center and SandRidge Skytrail, a facility that features a zip line across the river.
‘Unfair advantage’
Rowing officials realize that the Boathouse District and Riversport Rapids is a destination for professional athletes and also hope both will help establish more local athletes.
“When you have young kids that grow up in a community that live a 15-minute drive from this kind of water, this kind of coaching, this kind of equipment, it almost becomes an unfair advantage to being born someplace else in the country,” said Jacobi, a 1992 gold medal winner in slalom doubles canoe.
The University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma City University and the University of Central Oklahoma each have rowing teams and train there. There are also youth camps and programs training a new generation of rowers, thanks to the benefits of the transformed Oklahoma River.
“An Olympic gold medal dream can truly start right here in Oklahoma City,” Jacobi said.
A public attraction
While many envision the day when professional whitewater rafters train at the new course, Mike Knopp, director of the Oklahoma City Boathouse Foundation, visualizes a different picture.
“Imagine yourself less than two years from now in Bricktown,” Knopp said. “You have some dinner and you decide to go whitewater rafting. In what other American city can you do that?”
Knopp said the public course will offer a 90-minute traning session with instructor-supervised time on the rapids.
“This is for everybody in the community,” Knopp said. “We are going to have all sorts of different ways to get wet, get on the water and have fun.”
In recent years, OKC has completed large-scale projects that transformed parts of the city. Bricktown converted obsolete warehouses into an entertainment district, and streetscape projects downtown created bike lanes and sidewalks. While those projects allowed locals to enjoy features found in other cities nationwide, the whitewater center and Boathouse District are unique both nationally and worldwide.
“We are the only city in America doing this,” Knopp said. “This is a differentiator for Oklahoma City.”
http://okgazette.com/2014/10/29/whit...ransformation/
Steve's has got everyone's brain cells bouncing around like pin-pong balls in a popcorn machine. A classic 'wild goose' chase; like the boy scouts' snipe huntsSteve Lackmeyer 11:25 a.m. I do see more entertainment venues being added to the mix. There is possibly one development that could really change the game and even be something that would make Dallas and Kansas City jealous. How's that for a teaser?
I have no idea what Steve has indirectly been referring to as "the jealousy project"; but you folks need to think MUCH bigger if it's something to make Dallas or KC jealous. One new skyscraper, an average mixed-use development (even one that's awesome for OKC) or a nice bridge isn't going to make those markets jealous. It would take something truly HUGE to make those markets blush. Heck most people in those markets if they don't have some sort of family or business ties to our market, don't even care about our market or pay attention to it. It'd take something big to divert attention TO us.
Nope.. only 5 other such facilities in the United states.
Just to be clear my comment although was based off of the chatter from Steve's jealousy thing was a general jealousy statement, aka just excited about how awesome and fairly unique this will be for OKC. I know my wife and I and some of our friends are ready to give it a go when it opens! It will be open to the public right???
Whatever it is metro, it is got to be one of Oklahoma City's best kept secrets... ...too big for us to believe that the 'pie fell from the sky.'Something that would make Kansas City & Dallas markets jealous?
Steve is obviously laughing about this teaser; whatever it is? When he drops this bombshell; it will blow a lot of brain breaker boxes & fuses simultaneously.
Only big thing that I think that would make those cities jealous would be an Olympic Park with a stadium, athletic village housing and the works. That would be more in the sports specular realm than entertainment.
I couldn't imagine an Oklahoma City & Tulsa joint Olympic bid sometime after 2024.
Tulsa 2024 Olympics? Oklahoma's Second-Largest City Inquires About Hosting Games
If Wikipedia is correct here are other artificial whitewater courses in the US.
Dickerson Whitewater Course | Potomac Whitewater Racing Center
U.S. National Whitewater Center | The U.S. National Whitewater Center is the world?s premier outdoor recreation and environmental education center offering activities such as Rafting, Biking, Climbing, Ziplines, Eco Trekking and more.
Adventure Sports Center Intl | McLaughlin Whitewater Design Group
There are others that are not completely artificial
No... he's not. He's already addressed how overblown that statement has become several times and told people to stop obsessing over it. I don't understand why it keeps getting dragged up over and over again when he's been pretty clear that it was just another neat concept that will probably never leave the drawing boards. We've seen a lot of them. Go look at the Bricktown towers thread for another nice example.
Let's get back to talking about the facility that this thread is supposed to be about.
Anyone had any experience with a similar white water facility? Every time I look at the concept art I have a hard time visualizing how it actually works. It really looks like the type of thing that will be awesome somehow, but I just can't see how it compares to the real thing.
To a large extent the USNWC and ours are the only two that basically will have everything the other has at every level of rafting/slalom kayaking/amenities (though some of the non-whitewater amenities in the USNWC are in the course proper are over by our adjacent boathouses and they do not have any sort of flat water course in the near vicinity). The Adventure Sport Center's has just as nice a recreational channel and has really nice amenities (though less than either USNWC or ours will) but does not offer a similarly difficult competitive channel. Dickerson's course is at least a tier or more below the other courses and has pretty spartan amenities. For some reason I was kind of thinking there was another one similar to Adventure Sport Center somewhere in New England but I am not going to check on that tonight, maybe it was one of the semi natural courses.5? I thought there was only one other.
Realistically whitewater courses are few and far enough between they are not really competing for local and rarely for regional tourism, which will probably be the majority of the business. There will be some competition for hosting national events but most years that will probably just be a slight bump to the normal competitor numbers coming to events held. In some ways it would be nice it there were more whitewater hot spots in surrounding states since that would help with our ability to draw people to have a similar level events to what we do in rowing.
Dallas does have a small whitewater park but it is at a vastly smaller scale than any of those listed above, it is like two falls and a park lot.
Of course by the nature of this kind of facility there are going to be considerably differences between them. There is not a standard type of course but there are some requirements for competitive courses.
This is the problem. As a writer, he should know that words have meanings. He should mean what he says and say what he means. Him saying it was overblown or not literal sounds like CYA to me. If this thing comes to fruition and it truly is enough to make Dallas and KC jealous, I will happily eat my crow. But it seems that the way he's backtracking on this, it may not be quite as cool as he originally stated and is trying to cover for it now.
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