Quote:
Originally Posted by shivtim
This just isn't true. The dome continues to host a number of very high profile events. The SEC championship, Chick-Fil-A bowl and Chick-Fil-A kickoff games every year, and the NCAA Final Four next year (already hosted twice in the past decade), just for example.
|
This is absolutely true. This can't be debated. If we want to host a Super Bowl, we need a new stadium, if we want to host non-friendly soccer matches, which plenty of people would love, we would need a new stadium because the Georgia Dome does not qualify. We lost out on the new major bowl between the champions of the Big 12 and SEC mainly because we don't have a new, shiny stadium. All the other events, Final Fours, will be tougher to lure with an outdated stadium, which the Georgia Dome is.
Quote:
Originally Posted by shivtim
We will eventually need a replacement stadium, and I'm fine with some hotel/motel tax being spent on it, but now is not the time. Maybe 10-15 years from now. There are just WAY better things the city could do right now with $300 million, even when limited to things that directly impact tourists. Improved sidewalks and streetscapes, expand the Ambassador program, fund MARTA renovations, expand the streetcar out to the Beltline, improve police/security, deal with the Ptree/Pine shelter problem, fund more events in Centennial Park, better signs and wayfinding, better crosswalk infrastructure, tourism advertising and promotion, etc etc etc
|
10-15 years is too late in my opinion. The stadium is already one of the oldest in the NFL and most of the ones older (such as Soldier Field, Arrowhead Stadium) have had massive renovations recently, which would be just as costly as building a new stadium from what has been released; or the team is currently in the process of getting a new stadium or subject to relocation rumors (Buffalo, Minnesota, San Diego, etc.).
And while all these things are nice, and I would love for all of them to be done, I don't think they would bring the same ROI that a stadium would.
Quote:
Originally Posted by shivtim
I also have zero faith in a new stadium being "integrated" into the surrounding neighborhoods. Football stadiums are too large for that to occur. I can't think of any NFL stadium in the entire county that is well integrated into an urban environment. They all are either suburban or surrounded by parking lots or park space. The concept only really works with smaller (baseball, basketball, hockey) stadiums. If even NYC, DC, Boston, etc can't have an urban NFL stadium, I don't think Atlanta can pull it off. Just look at the Falcon's own estimates for how many parking spaces will be needed for the new stadium.
|
That's your opinion, but its possible. St. Louis' Edward Jones Dome, Detroit's Ford Field, and Carolina's Bank of America Stadium all do a good job.
Quote:
Originally Posted by shivtim
And as for the economic benefit, check out the peer-reviewed literature. Most of it says that taxpayer subsidized stadiums either have no effect or a negative effect on the local economy.
|
I've seen the studies, but all cases are different. The city isn't financing the entire stadium, only a portion, and many of the studies look at "where the money could go" in regards to money spent at the stadium. They look at it in a broad sense saying a person, instead of spending money at the Georgia Dome, could spend the money at a movie theater. Either way, the money is spent into the local economy, correct? But the movie theater isn't subsidized. However, that completely disregards Atlanta's situation. Most people coming to the stadium aren't choosing between spending their money at the stadium in Atlanta or some other business in Atlanta, but rather spending their money in Atlanta or spending their money in their suburban town. Not to mention all the events that we've both talked about that bring in people from out of town.
I wouldn't be crushed if the stadium wasn't built. It's just my opinion it would be a good thing and fortunately the city is committed to this. I understand where you're coming from and I am aware of all the "negatives", I just think the positives outweigh them.
Edit: And to touch on what Simms said, I'm not saying to host a Super Bowl is the reason to build a new stadium, but the Falcons are getting a new stadium. Do you want the stadium in Atlanta or somewhere else in the metro area?