I like to think I have been the most consistent person on urban development in the OKCTalk community. I am often accused of living by rigid dogma I am so consistent and nearly every person on OKCTalk knows what I am going to say before I even say it - but anyhow, let me spell it out again so as to removed any confusion or misunderstanding.
1) I support a new convention center. I always have. Never once have I said I didn't.
2) I don't think a convention center will produce the revenue the Chamber told us it will - and it sure won't ever come close to recouping the $250 million price tag in either direct or indirect spending.
3) I don't like the REHCO location. A) Convention centers kill walkability. They are built at a scale that is not conducive to pedestrians. I don't mean from the front door to downtown hotels or Bricktown - I mean they will create a large separation between future Core to Shore residential development and downtown. Maybe even big enough to prevent future residential development. B) MBG would be better served being surround by midrise residential and sidewalk cafes.
4) Convention centers are a necessary evil, so they should be placed where they do the least harm to the community - and not so much where they maximize conventions. In my opinion, the full time permanent residents of a city should take priority over accommodating 3 and 4 day visitors and the business interest that cater to them.
5) I am not sold on a large public subsidy for a convention hotel that will still require an annual operating subsidy.
6) From an out of town visitor standpoint - it would make more economic sense to buy 700,000 random people a plane ticket to OKC under the condition they stay at a downtown hotel than it would be to build a convention center and hotel. That would be 200 out of town visitors every day for 10 years and if each stayed 5 days that would be 1000 out-of-towners downtown every single day - or in convention counting: 5,000 attendees every single week (how many conventions does OKC plan to have that big). Now I am not proposing we do that - I am just saying that it will produce more revenue than a convention center and hotel will.
7) I think the Chamber pulled the wool over the collective eyes of Oklahoma Citians but getting us to commit to a phase 1 convention center without telling anyone that a phase 2 and hotel were necessary to make it successful (something that is still being swept under the rug to this very day).
8) Fact - the vast majority of people currently using the Cox Center are people from Central Oklahoma. The numbers aren't even close. THAT is why I support a new convention center. It is a quality of life issue for me and not an economic one. If it was an economic decision I would just support item 6 above.
9) Convention centers are not a catalyst for new development. You cited Lucas Oil Stadium as a shining example of success - well go look at Google Earth and use the date slider and tell me if you see any adjacent development before and after. If there is any I sure can't see it. The very fact that Lucas Oil Stadium was build on a surface parking lot across the street from the RCA dome 30 years AFTER the RCA dome was built should be proof to anyone that convention centers and stadiums don't drive adjacent development. At best, they provide customers to existing businesses in the city - and that is it and more often than not, those customers are already area residents which doesn't supply new money to the local economy - it just redistributes who gets it. However, that doesn't stop the Chamber from counting them as convention center attendees and applying the revenue multiplier to them (see the Women's Conference).
10) I get it - you own a business that derives a lot of money from visitors, but good urbanism and community building should take a back-seat to private gain. I know that is a tough pill to swallow but that is the exact thing we collectively have been hammering Devon, Sandridge, the Public Works Department, OGE, and countless other developers/architects over for the last 7 or 8 years - and YOU were a part of that. Alas, when it comes down to your checkbook all of a sudden your emphasis on walkability is now limited to the tiny plot of ground between the front door of the convention center and Bricktown/Downtown. Some of us still care about walkability and good urban design for all of downtown and the downtown adjacent areas - even areas that haven't been developed yet. How can you ever promote walkability to anyone else when you opted out of it yourself when it came down to how it impacted you? It is disappointing.
Okay - that about sums it up for me. Since this was just 'off the top of my head' writing I am sure I left something off or wasn't clear on a specific item so if you or anyone else has any doubt about my position let me know and I will clear it up.
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