Quote:
Originally Posted by summersm343
Just a thought. Not sure if it's correct or not. Maybe they're waiting to clean up the grounds until after Made in America?
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I hope not. It's a pretty large, regional event - with lots of folks travelling from all over to attend - doesn't it make sense to spruce up the area around the event to showcase yourself well?
This would be like hosting a huge party at your house with lots of guests, and deciding NOT to clean up beforehand b/c, hey, it's just going to get dirty with everyone anyways.
In terms of the maintenance of the garage structure - I was there a few months back and the waterfall design feature just wasn't working and the space - which is only a few years old - looked to be in not great shape.
This is a larger point but, in general, Philly just doesn't seem to care about superficial aesthetics. It's always been tied or written off to the "well we have bigger fish to fry w/ bad schools, poverty and crime" - but unfortunately I think it's all tied together and a self-defeating cycle. You know who else has crime, poverty and bad schools? Chicago - and it just landed McDonalds, ConAgra, GE Health, and Kraft Heinz HQs which will boost the city's tax coffers by a huge chunk - more of which can now go to schools, poverty, and crime.
How? Chicago is world class at showing itself well - in the Loop every street is immaculate - every park is swept, clean, and well-invested. It's like a businessperson's theme park. When you approach the city from the airport you can't see decaying neighborhoods, old refineries, rail-yards, and ugly power plants, etc. that make it feel like you are entering a declining, depressing rust belt relic of a city - because they have installed 12 foot barrier walls. That may sound callous and superficial, but it's true - big corporations want to be in a place that's spick-and-span: it's their front door/backyard. They don't want high-profile guests/clients entering their city through the gates of Hell.