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  #61  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2023, 5:35 AM
wanderer34 wanderer34 is offline
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I mean, he sold them because he was nearing the end of life, didn't care about basketball at all and wanted to focus on his first love, hockey. He ran the 6ers into the ground, they weren't getting butts in the seats, and he couldn't care less about the sport. That aside, it's weird that Comcast still owns the Flyers, they're a big enough company that they should have outgrown them by now, just like Disney did, but that's another matter.
It was Snider's right to sell the team, even though I disagree with the sale, it was done, and it goes down as probably the stupidest event in Philly sports alongside the Clarke/Lindros soap opera and the TO/McNabb fiasco that split up at the fanbases.

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I still don't understand how people are getting displaced by this. Arenas don't generify. That's why people have largely wised up to the tax payer money grabs - they don't provide a return to the community. The myth has been exposed and the only people peddling it are billionaires still looking for handouts and Chinatown proponents. Strange bedfellows.

It can have a positive impact on the neighborhood, but displacing people is a jump.
There's less Chinese in DC Chinatown than in 1995, when the MCI Arena (now Verizon Center) was completed. It "revitalized" DC Chinatown and brought the Capitals and the Wizards to DC for the first time in their histories, at the expense of DC Chinatown, which was majority Chinese, not a former shell of itself. Philadelphia, if the arena is built, is going to be destined to follow in that path. Another example is the old St Louis Chinatown, which was sacrified for the Busch Stadium back in 1966 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinatown,_St._Louis)


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It would host far more than 41 games a year. I don't have the numbers anymore since I've switched industries, but in the 2010's I know the WFC was one of the busiest arenas in the country between sports, concerts, and other events. They host events the majority of the year, not just a little over 1 month.
How can you be sure when the WFC already hosts the bulk of major concerts in the city. It has potential, but the Sports Complex has better infrastructure with the BSL, wide, major streets such as Broad St (PA 611) and Pattison Ave, and the Schuylkiil (I-76) and the Delaware (I-95) Expressways bookending the Sports Complex with relative ease, serving suburban and urban spectators alike.

I've felt that since the Spectrum and the WFC co-exiseted (back when it was called the First Union Center, then the Wachovia Center), that placing another arena at either the old Spectrum or the Vet sites was the next best solution if the city couldn't agree to allow the 76ers and the Flyers share the WFC.

I don't see how erecting 76 Place at 10th and Market will be able to handle the traffic flow, considering that the only major street of that magnitude is Market St, and the numbered streets and the east-west streets aren't wide nor efficient enough to really handle all that traffic. Plus, barring I-76 and I-95, I-676 is the closest expressway connecting the proposed arena, and it's not a direct route, as you have to go through CC neighborhoods just get to this proposed arena.

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It's not about the walk, it's about the transfers. If you live near the BSL it's awesome. I'm in West Philly and I need to take the trolley to the Broad Street line and it SUCKS. If I'm going to a 6ers game (and as a season ticket holder, I go to quite a few games), the trolleys are generally done running for the night by the time the game is over. Instead, I usually drive to South Philly and just on at Federal Ellsworth because otherwise the transfers take too much time out of my day and causes a headache.

Even that fails at times. Going to the Phillies on Sunday, I had two consecutive trains pass us (which were not full and not scheduled as express trains) and my son lost his shit because we missed the first pitch of the game. I'm trying to raise him to be urban and appreciate public transit, but SEPTA made an enemy out of my 7 year old this weekend, which is a damn shame.

Honestly, I would have preferred the 6ers stay in the stadium district because it is a unique gameday experience having everything right there. I get that that's not the world we live in through and economics dictate that they push out somewhere else. My second choice would have been over the tracks at 30th street, but this is a solid option as well. I am highly skeptical it is actually any threat to Chinatown or anyone else. Instead, it will likely make that stretch of Market safer.
Your gripe should be with SEPTA, not the location of the arena/stadium. The system is very antiquated as it is. Even with the proposed arena, it's not going to push SEPTA to be any better because the five counties run the entire system and Philly has little say so, even with the surface and subway routes, it has little say so because of how SEPTA is ran.

The city should have a major say with the subway and many of the bus routes (which are also antiquated and should also change such as the H, XH, and 26 bus routes, which are highly inefficient routes).

I'm also not sure about your past planning, but if you're going to a sporting event in this city, it's best to come 2 hours before game time since you're going to encounter a lot of spectators anyways.
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  #62  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2023, 7:26 AM
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And albeit technically it’s not Chinatown, it’s basically a block away and the impact felt will be huge once it’s built by 2031 (if it gets built)!
Exactly. This is disingenuous and in bad faith. We're talking half a block, 100 feet maybe? It's okay to have a differing opinion on whether it's ""in"" Chinatown or not. I would ALSO consider this in the gayborhood in a sense and I think will negatively impact it as well. I know it's contradictory, but I expect investors to want to buy up land to turn it into boring homogenous chains long term, while at the same time quality of life drops from crowds and traffic especially for older residents, playing further into the hands of property investors with people who are now ready to sell. I am less against this with the residential tower and retail, but I still don't think this is the best potential outcome. Of course I don't think the Gallery is the best use, but the East Market development repeated is what would really be best imo. I'm finally OK with this, but think mixed use office and residential is by far the best use, especially for transit access as a commute to on site jobs.
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  #63  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2023, 9:20 AM
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I've come to this conclusion; both sides are entrenched on this subject of a Sixers Arena; no argument will change either side; but the danger of disparaging parties that do not agree with whatever side we find ourselves will not help the arguments for or against; it will reinforce the perceptions that may already be assumed.

Let's strive to be civil; this debate is far older than many may actually know.
I've resigned myself to this idea.
With a retail ground floor and a tower attached I find it palatable.
I still think it's not a great idea. I just picture lines and lines of delivery vehicles of all sizes before and after every single event.
I have higher hopes for E Market than a sea of sports bars but it's been a long wait. A more residential component. Arenas are not good neighbors IMHO.
I like the tower design. The arena design is a little casino-esque.

I still prefer this;
but, instead of a mall, it is a part of Jefferson with retail ground floor.
This argument is played
Fashion District Tower proposal by

Walking past Barclays smells like pee
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  #64  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2023, 12:34 PM
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Parker and city council seem more on board, so I expect this will be a done deal once she takes office
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  #65  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2023, 1:47 PM
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One thing is for sure; whether the Sixers Arena comes or whether its made into more updated Retail Space one thing has to be addressed and fast; its the Crime and Looting.

If we keep seeing Crime and Looting in downtown a huge segment of the population will not want to go downtown; this has the potential to cost billions of dollars no matter who wins out.
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  #66  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2023, 1:52 PM
JohnIII JohnIII is offline
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On this design or really any design on Market East I find 2 things hold my attention.

1. Deal with the Crime
2. The old Gimble's Site aka Disney Hole.

If we could stop the crime and looting and market to international business to build something like Liberty Place at 8th and Market then you have a catalyst for the Fashion District to succeed.

I'm not sure if a basketball Arena would work in any case but hey; I haven't watched the NBA since Dr. J; I got turned off by them letting Jordan walk all over the court and the constant hype back then so aside from Iverson and Imbed I struggle to come back to the sport. I'm not sure an Arena will work on the site but confess I have to look into it some more.

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Originally Posted by SEFTA View Post
I've resigned myself to this idea.
With a retail ground floor and a tower attached I find it palatable.
I still think it's not a great idea. I just picture lines and lines of delivery vehicles of all sizes before and after every single event.
I have higher hopes for E Market than a sea of sports bars but it's been a long wait. A more residential component. Arenas are not good neighbors IMHO.
I like the tower design. The arena design is a little casino-esque.

I still prefer this;
but, instead of a mall, it is a part of Jefferson with retail ground floor.
This argument is played
Fashion District Tower proposal by

Walking past Barclays smells like pee
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  #67  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2023, 2:27 PM
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Market St is not Chinatown.
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  #68  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2023, 3:46 PM
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Originally Posted by wanderer34 View Post
It was Snider's right to sell the team, even though I disagree with the sale, it was done, and it goes down as probably the stupidest event in Philly sports alongside the Clarke/Lindros soap opera and the TO/McNabb fiasco that split up at the fanbases.
Snider was a terrible basketball owner. I'm not sure how you can see it any other way.


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There's less Chinese in DC Chinatown than in 1995, when the MCI Arena (now Verizon Center) was completed. It "revitalized" DC Chinatown and brought the Capitals and the Wizards to DC for the first time in their histories, at the expense of DC Chinatown, which was majority Chinese, not a former shell of itself. Philadelphia, if the arena is built, is going to be destined to follow in that path. Another example is the old St Louis Chinatown, which was sacrified for the Busch Stadium back in 1966 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinatown,_St._Louis)
Correlation, not causation in DC. The point is that arenas are not proven to improve (or gentrify) cities.


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Originally Posted by wanderer34 View Post
I've felt that since the Spectrum and the WFC co-exiseted (back when it was called the First Union Center, then the Wachovia Center), that placing another arena at either the old Spectrum or the Vet sites was the next best solution if the city couldn't agree to allow the 76ers and the Flyers share the WFC.
How can you be sure when the WFC already hosts the bulk of major concerts in the city. It has potential, but the Sports Complex has better infrastructure with the BSL, wide, major streets such as Broad St (PA 611) and Pattison Ave, and the Schuylkiil (I-76) and the Delaware (I-95) Expressways bookending the Sports Complex with relative ease, serving suburban and urban spectators alike.
If you have concerns that WFC would continue to host most concerts then I'm not sure why you don't clearly see that some basic geographic differentiation is what the 6ers are going for here. There's also not a finite set of events to host, there is room for growth with another venue.

They want a more central location for the CITY, not the surrounding SUBURBS. By this logic, they should move the stadium complex to KOP since they have so many highways! Market has ALL of the regional rails, it has the MFL, and is close to the BSL, it has the trolleys. It's also not at the end of a subway line, so the commute is closer for people on both ends of the city.

I love the stadium complex and don't want it to go away, but to think it is more connected of has better infrastructure is only possible if you completely ignore public transit and are suburban/car focused. If that's the case, you are missing the point. Driving in the city sucks, even at the current complex.


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Originally Posted by wanderer34 View Post
Your gripe should be with SEPTA, not the location of the arena/stadium. The system is very antiquated as it is. Even with the proposed arena, it's not going to push SEPTA to be any better because the five counties run the entire system and Philly has little say so, even with the surface and subway routes, it has little say so because of how SEPTA is ran.

The city should have a major say with the subway and many of the bus routes (which are also antiquated and should also change such as the H, XH, and 26 bus routes, which are highly inefficient routes).

I'm also not sure about your past planning, but if you're going to a sporting event in this city, it's best to come 2 hours before game time since you're going to encounter a lot of spectators anyways.
I've been living in the city and going to all sorts of games for my entire life. 2 hours before an event, especially a basketball game is a comical idea. Maybe if you're driving then that makes sense (i.e. tailgating an eagles game), but generally, taking public transit (at least for the last leg) gets you in and out substantially very faster. From West Philly, I can usually find a way to get to the games in 30 mins, and when I was in Point Breeze, it was closer to 15 mins door to door. Driving? It can take that long just to get out of the parking lot.

You want to improve public transit though? Get more riders. That's the whole point here, though it seems to be going over your head.
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  #69  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2023, 4:45 PM
3rd&Brown 3rd&Brown is offline
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There's less Chinese in DC Chinatown than in 1995, when the MCI Arena (now Verizon Center) was completed. It "revitalized" DC Chinatown and brought the Capitals and the Wizards to DC for the first time in their histories, at the expense of DC Chinatown, which was majority Chinese, not a former shell of itself. Philadelphia, if the arena is built, is going to be destined to follow in that path. Another example is the old St Louis Chinatown, which was sacrified for the Busch Stadium back in 1966 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinatown,_St._Louis)
This is factually incorrect. It's been documented a million times. DC's Chinatown was already in decline when the stadiums were being built. Something like 80% of the remaining Chinese at the time were elderly people living in a few assisted living communities or low cost government housing. The vast majority of younger Chinese at that point had already decamped for Northern Virginia.
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  #70  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2023, 5:20 PM
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As a DC resident in the 80s and 90s, then home to Rayful Edmonds and Cool "Disco" Dan, I laugh every time I read someone say the MCI Center killed DC's Chinatown. That whole area was dead as a doornail--I can't even think of a place in Philly's CBD that is currently as dead as that area was in the early 1990s. There are legitimate arguments against the stadium, but that's not one of them.
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  #71  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2023, 5:23 PM
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As a DC resident in the 80s and 90s, then home to Rayful Edmonds and Cool "Disco" Dan, I laugh every time I read someone say the MCI Center killed DC's Chinatown. That whole area was dead as a doornail--I can't even think of a place in Philly's CBD that is currently as dead as that area was in the early 1990s. There are legitimate arguments against the stadium, but that's not one of them.
Thank you for that fact check, people keep over looking the fact that the Race riots killed DC, and many other areas in the 60's which caused flight of all people not just white people.
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  #72  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2023, 6:14 PM
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I've been living in the city and going to all sorts of games for my entire life. 2 hours before an event, especially a basketball game is a comical idea.
Two hours is actually great time if you're coming from Miami.
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  #73  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2023, 6:45 PM
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I've been living in the city and going to all sorts of games for my entire life. 2 hours before an event, especially a basketball game is a comical idea. Maybe if you're driving then that makes sense (i.e. tailgating an eagles game), but generally, taking public transit (at least for the last leg) gets you in and out substantially very faster. From West Philly, I can usually find a way to get to the games in 30 mins, and when I was in Point Breeze, it was closer to 15 mins door to door. Driving? It can take that long just to get out of the parking lot.

You want to improve public transit though? Get more riders. That's the whole point here, though it seems to be going over your head.
I don't have much to add other than probably don't feed the beast.

In terms of transit times down to the games - I have it down to something of a science. I tend to transitview the route 40 bus, so I can walk out my door grab the bus and zoom over to Broad/South BSL. If I get lucky with subway headways I can actually be door-to-door (Fitler Square to WFC) in just about 20 minutes. Not bad.
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  #74  
Old Posted Sep 27, 2023, 8:27 PM
reparcsyks reparcsyks is offline
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rk_rZALp_vA

Not sure if a dim sum place exists in DC's Chinatown today, as all of them moved to the VA suburbs.
Apologies if I'm misinterpreting you, but are you implying that this arena would drive all the dim sum places to the burbs? If yes, how and why?

"Let's pack up this restaurant and move to Yardley, I am sick of all of these hungry sports/concert/event fans clogging the streets. I hate money."
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  #75  
Old Posted Sep 28, 2023, 8:57 AM
wanderer34 wanderer34 is offline
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This is factually incorrect. It's been documented a million times. DC's Chinatown was already in decline when the stadiums were being built. Something like 80% of the remaining Chinese at the time were elderly people living in a few assisted living communities or low cost government housing. The vast majority of younger Chinese at that point had already decamped for Northern Virginia.
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As a DC resident in the 80s and 90s, then home to Rayful Edmonds and Cool "Disco" Dan, I laugh every time I read someone say the MCI Center killed DC's Chinatown. That whole area was dead as a doornail--I can't even think of a place in Philly's CBD that is currently as dead as that area was in the early 1990s. There are legitimate arguments against the stadium, but that's not one of them.
DC had been dying since the '68 riots until, I would wager, until Obama came into office. Once Obama was elected was when DC started to see a major resurgence. Now, its almost unrecognizable in many spots thanks to the new ballpark and the multipurpose buildings DC has built along it's waterfront.

As far as who was leaving, whites did leave, mostly to VA and some to MoCo, then blacks started to join whites in fleeing to suburbia, mainly to PG County. It made a lot of sense to bring the Capitals and the Wizards from the struggling Capital Center, but it did sacrifice a small, but decent Chinatown, and killed it in the process.

DC is only 61 sq. mi. meaning that you had overflow into the MD suburbs, so it's easier to head to the suburbs in the DC area than it is in much bigger cities such as Philly, Detroit, Chicago, and NY, where the city limits are over 100 sq. mi.
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  #76  
Old Posted Sep 28, 2023, 9:21 AM
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Originally Posted by Groundhog View Post
Snider was a terrible basketball owner. I'm not sure how you can see it any other way.
He also did preside over the Iverson era. Croce was the GM, I believe, and while Snider was primarily a hockey man, we had one of best players in AI. If you couldn't see that, then I don't know if you're a fan of basketball or what.

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Correlation, not causation in DC. The point is that arenas are not proven to improve (or gentrify) cities.

If you have concerns that WFC would continue to host most concerts then I'm not sure why you don't clearly see that some basic geographic differentiation is what the 6ers are going for here. There's also not a finite set of events to host, there is room for growth with another venue.
It's al about logistics as well as location. The Sports Complex has two major interstates, a state highway (PA 611 - Broad St), a major arterial (Pattison Ave), and even side streets that are as wide as Market St and wider in some instances.

It may make more financial sense to build a stadium in the center of the city, but even a moron can see that traffic plus congestion will clog not only Market and Broad, but all of the side streets east of Broad.

Plus the train sets on the BSL and the MFL have 6 cars each. If you're going to want more space inside the trains, you have to expand to ten cars if you're considering spectators and the same can be said for the regional rail system.

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Originally Posted by Groundhog View Post
They want a more central location for the CITY, not the surrounding SUBURBS. By this logic, they should move the stadium complex to KOP since they have so many highways! Market has ALL of the regional rails, it has the MFL, and is close to the BSL, it has the trolleys. It's also not at the end of a subway line, so the commute is closer for people on both ends of the city.

I love the stadium complex and don't want it to go away, but to think it is more connected of has better infrastructure is only possible if you completely ignore public transit and are suburban/car focused. If that's the case, you are missing the point. Driving in the city sucks, even at the current complex.
Everybody who's pro Chinatown (or downtown) arena has this pie-in-the-sky thinking that this one arena is going to raise Philly's profile, boost wealth, and somehow turn Philadelphia into this elite city. Having an arena doesn't do that. A lot thought building Liberty Place, Mellon Bank Center, and the Bell Atlantic Tower would help Philly retain companies that was leaving for the suburbs, but we're still the poorest Top 10 big city. If that were the case, then we need to call Salt Lake City and Oklahoma City elite as well since they both have basketball arenas.

Philadelphia isn't as big as NYC and if we were, it wouldn't be a problem placing an arena downtown, but because we're not as big and expansive as NYC, and we don't have the wide avenues that NYC has, not the number of subway lines, commuter rail lines, and the massive infrastructure that NYC currently possesses, no matter how hard we want to think we're in the same league in NY, it's just not the same! It's practically impossible to assume that 76 Place will have the same cache and the same pedigree and legacy as MSG.

My beef is not with the new arena per se, but the location. There's more than enough space in the Sports Complex to build three new venues alone. I'd prefer the WFC but if Harris wants a new arena (and cheaper land costs), he should consider the Sports Complex.

I'm not 100% sold that Harris will pay for the traffic improvements and other infrastructure around Center City (electrical, water & sewage, capping Vine St, etc.), as the land at 10th and Market plus the arena seems to be the only thing that he's committed to and not the improvements around the arena and vicinity.

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Originally Posted by Groundhog View Post
I've been living in the city and going to all sorts of games for my entire life. 2 hours before an event, especially a basketball game is a comical idea. Maybe if you're driving then that makes sense (i.e. tailgating an eagles game), but generally, taking public transit (at least for the last leg) gets you in and out substantially very faster. From West Philly, I can usually find a way to get to the games in 30 mins, and when I was in Point Breeze, it was closer to 15 mins door to door. Driving? It can take that long just to get out of the parking lot.

You want to improve public transit though? Get more riders. That's the whole point here, though it seems to be going over your head.
It's comical for some, but depending on where you're at and where you live, it's best to get early than just thinking you're going to make it in 30 min on time to your assigned seat when you have up to 20K people arriving at WFC for the same reason. Especially if it's an important regular season game or a playoff game. You have to blame yourself for being tardy as well as SEPTA for that one!

Last edited by wanderer34; Sep 28, 2023 at 9:33 AM.
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  #77  
Old Posted Sep 28, 2023, 11:35 AM
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DC had been dying since the '68 riots until, I would wager, until Obama came into office. Once Obama was elected was when DC started to see a major resurgence. Now, its almost unrecognizable in many spots thanks to the new ballpark and the multipurpose buildings DC has built along it's waterfront.

As far as who was leaving, whites did leave, mostly to VA and some to MoCo, then blacks started to join whites in fleeing to suburbia, mainly to PG County. It made a lot of sense to bring the Capitals and the Wizards from the struggling Capital Center, but it did sacrifice a small, but decent Chinatown, and killed it in the process.

DC is only 61 sq. mi. meaning that you had overflow into the MD suburbs, so it's easier to head to the suburbs in the DC area than it is in much bigger cities such as Philly, Detroit, Chicago, and NY, where the city limits are over 100 sq. mi.
Proud Obama guy here, but this timeline isn't quite right. DC's resurgence truly began with the MCI Center in the mid-90s. The CBD filled in pretty quickly through the end of that decade, and spread east down Mass Ave. By mid-2000s Capitol Hill was booming (on Pennsylvania Ave side and the H street side), Columbia Heights was booming, the West End/Foggy Bottom exploded in development. Then the Obama years where everything grew.

If you ask a long-time DC resident what the catalyst was, they will all tell you it was Abe Pollin building the Chinatown stadium (with his own money). That's why the Philly debate is so head-scratching to me.
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  #78  
Old Posted Sep 28, 2023, 2:16 PM
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He also did preside over the Iverson era. Croce was the GM, I believe, and while Snider was primarily a hockey man, we had one of best players in AI. If you couldn't see that, then I don't know if you're a fan of basketball or what.
He let the team get bad enough to stumble into Iverson. Regardless, he never cared about basketball and this is not relevant to the discussion at hand.

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It's al about logistics as well as location. The Sports Complex has two major interstates, a state highway (PA 611 - Broad St), a major arterial (Pattison Ave), and even side streets that are as wide as Market St and wider in some instances.
Cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars. You're missing the point. This is a city. The transit is the priority and will reduce the reliance on cars.

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It may make more financial sense to build a stadium in the center of the city, but even a moron can see that traffic plus congestion will clog not only Market and Broad, but all of the side streets east of Broad.
This bolded point is why they will not build in the stadium complex. If the financials aren't there, it's not going to happen. everything else is moot. Also more talk about cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars.

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Originally Posted by wanderer34 View Post
Plus the train sets on the BSL and the MFL have 6 cars each. If you're going to want more space inside the trains, you have to expand to ten cars if you're considering spectators and the same can be said for the regional rail system.
I'm pro transit expansion and increased demand increased the likelihood of improvements! Again, it's the financials. Also, if you think the transit is good enough at the stadiums now with just the BSL (all south bound and funneling all other transit lines), then it is substantially better with the MFL (cars coming from the east AND west), regional rails, and trolleys feeding directly to the arena. Currently the BSL has to take all the traffic from these lines for the last leg of the journey, that concentration on one transit option is no longer needed here. Are you getting this? Do you need it sketched out?

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Originally Posted by wanderer34 View Post
Everybody who's pro Chinatown (or downtown) arena has this pie-in-the-sky thinking that this one arena is going to raise Philly's profile, boost wealth, and somehow turn Philadelphia into this elite city.
Literally nobody has said this. Stop it with the strawman arguments. This is about revitalizing one of the most highly visible commercial corridors in the city and replacing a defunct mall with an engaging asset. Could that impact our image? Maybe? However that is not the point. The point is it is the best possible (read: actually proposed and not theoretical) option to fix Market East. Nobody has said anything about this turning us into an "elite city", whatever that means.

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Originally Posted by wanderer34 View Post
we're still the poorest Top 10 big city.
Irrelevant since there is no public money involved here and possibly wrong (or soon to be wrong) - Houston is gunning for our belt!

Quote:
Originally Posted by wanderer34 View Post
Philadelphia isn't as big as NYC and if we were, it wouldn't be a problem placing an arena downtown
Plenty of cities have does this who are not NYC. We're not building MSG, we're not building TD Bank, we're talking about a peer, yes, but it will be it's own thing that's learned from what's been built before and been shown to work, and it will be build for PHILLY.

Quote:
Originally Posted by wanderer34 View Post
My beef is not with the new arena per se, but the location. There's more than enough space in the Sports Complex to build three new venues alone. I'd prefer the WFC but if Harris wants a new arena (and cheaper land costs), he should consider the Sports Complex.
You already admitted the financials don't work as well at the stadium. I'm sad they're leaving South Philly too, but their rationale is logical, not spiteful and will be a positive overall. Change is hard, but it is also constant, so stop complaining about something that is financially illogical (staying in the complex) and look at what is feasible (Market St, Camden!?, Penns Landing, 30th Street, etc). This move away from the WFC was inevitable, if you think there is a better option that makes sense, happy to hear about it, but I'm happy with this because it could have been worse, this is a winner. This isn't the Colts leaving Baltimore.

Quote:
Originally Posted by wanderer34 View Post
I'm not 100% sold that Harris will pay for the traffic improvements and other infrastructure around Center City (electrical, water & sewage, capping Vine St, etc.), as the land at 10th and Market plus the arena seems to be the only thing that he's committed to and not the improvements around the arena and vicinity.
This is part of what all the community back and forth is about. He better!

Quote:
Originally Posted by wanderer34 View Post
It's comical for some, but depending on where you're at and where you live, it's best to get early than just thinking you're going to make it in 30 min on time to your assigned seat when you have up to 20K people arriving at WFC for the same reason. Especially if it's an important regular season game or a playoff game. You have to blame yourself for being tardy as well as SEPTA for that one!
That sounds like much bigger issue when driving and driving from OUTSIDE the city. So more cars, cars, cars, cars, cars. If you're taking public transit this is rarely ever an issue - especially when you don't need to make transfers. That is really where I've found delays pile up getting to the stadium complex (or anywhere). The stadium complex requires transfers for anyone not on the BSL, as I did when I use to take the R7 or R6 from Chestnut Hill or Manayunk and now that I take the 34 from West Philly. The new proposal does not. That is why it is superior. You will no longer need to transfer on public transit or a car with a silly 2 hour lead time to get to a 6ers game once this is built. Time is the most valuable resource on the planet. I suggest you celebrate getting a bit more back with this move.

Also, just FYI, I was not tardy with my son, we had a transfer issue, yes, but we actually still JUST made it into CBP (not into our seats) for the first pitch though it involved a lot more running than I'd hoped for. Also, if we had to arrive TWO hours early for a game, I wouldn't ever be able to take my son to one. What a sad world that would be.
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Last edited by Groundhog; Sep 28, 2023 at 4:12 PM.
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  #79  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2023, 4:14 AM
wanderer34 wanderer34 is offline
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Originally Posted by VirtualWorker View Post
Proud Obama guy here, but this timeline isn't quite right. DC's resurgence truly began with the MCI Center in the mid-90s. The CBD filled in pretty quickly through the end of that decade, and spread east down Mass Ave. By mid-2000s Capitol Hill was booming (on Pennsylvania Ave side and the H street side), Columbia Heights was booming, the West End/Foggy Bottom exploded in development. Then the Obama years where everything grew.

If you ask a long-time DC resident what the catalyst was, they will all tell you it was Abe Pollin building the Chinatown stadium (with his own money). That's why the Philly debate is so head-scratching to me.
I agree that the MCI Center did start the revitalization on DC, but even so, DC was still declining until the 2000s (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washin....#Demographics). It started to grow in the 2010s and now, as of 2020, had it's highest growth ever.

Before 2010 and before Obama, DC, along with Baltimore, were both deciding cities, mainly due to the violent crime, and in Baltimore's case, as declining manufacturing base.

DC didn't have much of a manufacturing base, which is why it quickly rebounded while Baltimore is still in the doldrums of decline due to decline. And until 2010, Baltimore was the largest city in the DMV area until Washington DC surpassed it back in 2010, I believe.
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  #80  
Old Posted Sep 29, 2023, 6:29 AM
wanderer34 wanderer34 is offline
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Originally Posted by Groundhog View Post
He let the team get bad enough to stumble into Iverson. Regardless, he never cared about basketball and this is not relevant to the discussion at hand.
It's pretty debatable, but from the 80's to today, the NBA is a much more lucrative and marketable sport than the NHL and basketball is the second most popular sport only behind soccer globally.

The NHL basically imploded back during the 1994 strike, the relocation of teams to the Sunbelt, the dead puck era, and the 2005 strike. We haven't really seen a true dynasty since Edmonton, even though DET, NJ, and PIT can be technically considered dynasties since those teams did win within a 10-year frame. But the NHL these days have a tough marketable image, especially for old time fans.

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Originally Posted by Groundhog View Post
Cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars. You're missing the point. This is a city. The transit is the priority and will reduce the reliance on cars.

This bolded point is why they will not build in the stadium complex. If the financials aren't there, it's not going to happen. everything else is moot. Also more talk about cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars cars.
This post is very immature immature immature if you ask me. Do you even know the real reason why the Sports Complex was built in the first place. It has ties going back to to the 1926 Sesquicentennial Exposition, with JFK Stadium (formerly Philadelphia Municipal Stadium).

Before the modern Sports Complex was planned, we all know that the Eagles played at Franklin Field, the Phillies played at Shibe Park, and the Sixers played at the old Civic Center. The old NHL team, the Quakers played at 46th and Market called the Philadelphia Arena.

In a "perfect" world, Shibe Park, Franklin Field, the Civic Center, and the Philadelphia Arena would all be directly inside the arena but we all know that those places today would have a tough time selling due to a lack of skyboxes, low capacity, and a lack of parking. That's the world we live in today.

Three Rivers Stadium in Pittsburgh, Lakefront Stadium in Cleveland, Riverfront Stadium in Cincinnati, the old Busch Stadium in St Louis, and lets not forget Giants Stadium and Sullivan Stadium in New England in the late 60's were built because there was enough land that was cheap plus there was nearby interstates that could be utilized for those spectators going to and from these venues. The Meadowlands and Foxborough also offer commuter rail service and Philadelphia has similar with the BSL and can even offer regional rail service at Broad and Terminal if SEPTA worked with CSX to use the 26th St viaduct.

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Originally Posted by Groundhog View Post
I'm pro transit expansion and increased demand increased the likelihood of improvements! Again, it's the financials. Also, if you think the transit is good enough at the stadiums now with just the BSL (all south bound and funneling all other transit lines), then it is substantially better with the MFL (cars coming from the east AND west), regional rails, and trolleys feeding directly to the arena. Currently the BSL has to take all the traffic from these lines for the last leg of the journey, that concentration on one transit option is no longer needed here. Are you getting this? Do you need it sketched out?
I believe Pattison Station is sufficient enough because it's a terminal (even though I personally believe the BSL can be extended as far as the Navy Yard and even Chester, which hasn't happened thanks to SEPTA), the wide platforms, and the accessibility and ease of going to and from Pattison, with elevators and escalators. Pattison isn't perfect, and the BSL should've been a four track line from Pattison going all the way to Jenkintown-Wyncote, IMHO, but Pattison Station as we know it does a better job of handling spectators, than let's say 8th and 11th St stations.

There's no escalators, the pedestrian tunnels and passageways are too much of a labyrinth as well as they're dirty, there's no free crossover between the eastbound and westbound platforms, and the platforms are relatively narrow in comparison to Pattison, which was designed to handle a lot of spectators going to and from the Sports Complex.

Even though I'm a big mass transit guy (not a SEPTA fan), I still miss the point of Market East Station being a even bigger hub due to the new arena proposed when it's essentially already a hub. It was a much better regional rail hub when SEPTA had the alphanumeric designations (R2, R6, R8, etc.), but SEPTA had truncated the lines to either just end at either 30th St or Temple for whatever reason.

And I'm also not convinced that building the Center City arena will all of a sudden make SEPTA this model of mass transit when it's the polar opposite meaning it's the worst mass transit system in the country, IMHO! SEPTA hasn't even restored and renovated the old Bethlehem branch to Allentown and Easton, as well as the Reading & Lancaster services, and we don't even have stub services to West Chester, Oxford, and Newtown.

I've given up on SEPTA several years back because when you have Sunbelt cities like Miami, Dallas-Fort Worth, and LA expanding their commuter rail and mass transit systems, and Philadelphia, which is an older, more established city, with much more rail infrastructure than those aforementioned cities, you'd expect a lot more rail services from SEPTA (and NJ Transit) than those cities, but SEPTA has yet to expand a subway, trolley, or commuter rail line while Miami, Dallas, and LA have expanded theirs.

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Originally Posted by Groundhog View Post
Literally nobody has said this. Stop it with the strawman arguments. This is about revitalizing one of the most highly visible commercial corridors in the city and replacing a defunct mall with an engaging asset. Could that impact our image? Maybe? However that is not the point. The point is it is the best possible (read: actually proposed and not theoretical) option to fix Market East. Nobody has said anything about this turning us into an "elite city", whatever that means.
I'm really getting tired of hearing that in order for Philadelphia to be this or that, we need to attract Amazon, we need to build this o that, we need to get this or that, we need to have this or that store in order to be amongst the prime American cities, and hearing that one arena shoehorned at 10th and Market will revitalize Center City, and eventually all of Philadelphia is pure bunk, if you ask me.

When Amazon was searching for a second HQ location, a lot of Philly pols were talking about how attracting Amazon will all of a sudden revitalize Philadelphia. No other city talks how a company or a structure will revitalize it's city more than Philadelphia and you don't hear other cities talking like that either because they have their economies intact, not even Chicago, with it's problems!

The revitalization should've started once Liberty Place was first built back in 1987. Once we had our skyline, and the Comcast Center was erected, there should've been much more emphasis on not just retaining companies that we already had here, but incubating and attracting firms and corporations that could help Philadelphia indirectly through revenues long term.

We lost a lot of big businesses such as Sunoco, CIGNA, Lincoln Financial, and Santander to either the suburbs or to other cities. Also, lowering the wage tax as well as other business taxes would've helped revitalize the city, as well as repairing the declining housing stock, improving the school system, Maintaining our parks and waterways, and probably, the most important, cleaning our streets.

Even if we did build the Center City arena, crime, poverty, miseducation, drugs, and homelessness aren't going to just disappear just because of an arena.

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Originally Posted by Groundhog View Post
Irrelevant since there is no public money involved here and possibly wrong (or soon to be wrong) - Houston is gunning for our belt!
Where's the link? Plus, there's a lot of Fortune 500 companies based out of Houston, meaning there's a lot of wealth, albeit, not in the same line as Philadelphia. We couldn't even retain Sunoco, our only petroleum company, which was lost to Dallas.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Groundhog View Post
Plenty of cities have does this who are not NYC. We're not building MSG, we're not building TD Bank, we're talking about a peer, yes, but it will be it's own thing that's learned from what's been built before and been shown to work, and it will be build for PHILLY.
The peer that we have is called the Wells Fargo Center. And if Harris wanted to build an even more modern stadium, all that could've been done at the sports complex.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Groundhog View Post
You already admitted the financials don't work as well at the stadium. I'm sad they're leaving South Philly too, but their rationale is logical, not spiteful and will be a positive overall. Change is hard, but it is also constant, so stop complaining about something that is financially illogical (staying in the complex) and look at what is feasible (Market St, Camden!?, Penns Landing, 30th Street, etc). This move away from the WFC was inevitable, if you think there is a better option that makes sense, happy to hear about it, but I'm happy with this because it could have been worse, this is a winner. This isn't the Colts leaving Baltimore.
My assumptions is that you don't care about the well being, the communities, and the diversity of Philadelphia. If building a basketball arena in Center City just because you want a shorter commute from West Philadelphia is your wish, at the expense of people who want to preserve an ethnic enclave, I'm already convinced that your character is so self-centered that you could give a damn about other people and their beliefs and culture.

If destroying an enclave like Chinatown or even Midtown Village is the way to progress and revitalization, then I say just build the arena. I also say that losing whatever ethnic enclave at the expense of a millionaire and his pet project means that Philadelphia has lost it's soul as a city and doesn't regard it's communities in any way.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Groundhog View Post
This is part of what all the community back and forth is about. He better!
Are you 100% sure that Harris will pay for the rail, electrical, traffic, and water and sewage improvements? I don't even recall Harris saying anything about those but just buying up the land and building the arena and it doesn't defend your case!

Quote:
Originally Posted by Groundhog View Post
That sounds like much bigger issue when driving and driving from OUTSIDE the city. So more cars, cars, cars, cars, cars. If you're taking public transit this is rarely ever an issue - especially when you don't need to make transfers. That is really where I've found delays pile up getting to the stadium complex (or anywhere). The stadium complex requires transfers for anyone not on the BSL, as I did when I use to take the R7 or R6 from Chestnut Hill or Manayunk and now that I take the 34 from West Philly. The new proposal does not. That is why it is superior. You will no longer need to transfer on public transit or a car with a silly 2 hour lead time to get to a 6ers game once this is built. Time is the most valuable resource on the planet. I suggest you celebrate getting a bit more back with this move.
Did you forget that the real world doesn't revolve around just you. Not everybody has the privilege of living next to a stadium, arena, or sporting venue! I always wanted to see the Giants play football, but as a youth in Brooklyn, the Giants play in the Meadowlands, and in order to go to the Meadowlands, there was two ways: either by car, by bus via the Port Authority, or by subway train to the commuter rail to the Meadowlands.

For such a trip, that meant it would take up to 45 min to Penn Station from Brooklyn, depending on how fast the subway train is, to the Meadowlands Shuttle, who operates about 30 min to Metlife, or travel up to 42nd St and take the bus to the Meadowlands for almost an hour, making the trip about 2 hours, excluding subway delays, gridlock, and accidents either on the railway or the roadways, and not to mention the tens of thousands of spectators waiting for over an hour just to be first in the gate and in their seats, which is why I suggested to arrive 1-2 hours before game time since 30 min is unrealistic to think you'll make it from your home to your assigned seat, when you have people who'll wait hours just to be first in line!

Quote:
Originally Posted by Groundhog View Post
Also, just FYI, I was not tardy with my son, we had a transfer issue, yes, but we actually still JUST made it into CBP (not into our seats) for the first pitch though it involved a lot more running than I'd hoped for. Also, if we had to arrive TWO hours early for a game, I wouldn't ever be able to take my son to one. What a sad world that would be.
Once again, you plan early for these special events. Just because you left 30 min from home before game time doesn't assure you that you'll make it to the gate! That's on you (and SEPTA)!
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