and no renderings (surprise).
and no renderings (surprise).
Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!
That initial dirt work must be for a staging area/construction parking lot. Not a whole lot of construction equipment right now.
I imagine they are clearing the area for a groundbreaking ceremony. They plan to officially break ground in a month or so, March 1st is the target date.
If I understood correctly, this was formally approved at the City Council meeting this morning, with the design district overlay being suspended for it. I assume that means work will commence imminently?
Yes, the item was passed unanimously.
The city council vote is always just a rubber-stamp on what the design review committees and planning commission has already approved.
The design review exception is merely that OKANA will not have to seek committee approval for minor changes. Major changes would still be the purview of design review. As I stated before, this issue was very minor and just procedural.
Of note, former city manager Jim Couch is now working on behalf of the developers of this project.
Looking at the site plan, looks like the main road to the museum will be shifted further south.
The hotel developer has an impressive track record.
The law that allows the Chickasaws to operate Remington Park as a (non-Tribal) limited gaming operation (no table games) is a state law, and one that is specifically tied to horse racing facilities. As written it couldn't be replicated anywhere else in the state besides a horse track.
The state itself could allow full non-tribal class III gaming a la Nevada, which would open the door to non-tribal entities. But if the Chickasaws wanted to operate a tribal casino at OKANA - without letting non-Tribal casinos into the state as competition - it would legitimately require an act of the United States Congress and a major amendment to the Indian Gaming Regulatory act of 1988.
Information about Indian gaming, the Tribes have shared gaming revenue thru a compact with the state.
Oklahoma’s Indian gaming industry paid $167 million in exclusivity fees to the state last fiscal year
State revenues from gaming increased more than 35% between the 2020 and 2021 fiscal years, which end in June, according to figures provided by Matthew Morgan, who chairs the Oklahoma Indian Gaming Association.--Oklahoman, August 18, 2021
This plan shows some more details, including the location of the aquarium which is proposed for Phase II:
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