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January 22, 2012 at 9:30 AM #19449January 22, 2012 at 9:36 AM #736555BubblesitterParticipant
Here’s a concept drawing.
http://media.utsandiego.com/news/documents/2012/01/21/newstadiumplan.pdf
January 22, 2012 at 10:01 AM #736558desmondParticipantSounds like what Greece thought when they held the Olympics in 2004.
January 22, 2012 at 10:10 AM #736560LesBaer45ParticipantIt’ll be $4.5 to $5 billion.
40 years from now SD will still be trying to pay it off.
January 22, 2012 at 10:16 AM #736561BubblesitterParticipantDesmond,
When Comic-con moves in 2015, you’ll have to trek up to LA or Vegas your Klingon Warrior Princess outfit. 🙂What is surprising it that normally conservative UT editorial is backing this, I guess they figure you have to spend money to make money. Looks like they did an acccounting of some of the funding sources, however it does have higher pricetag than current disjointed set of proposals.
Bubblesitter
January 22, 2012 at 10:47 AM #736563desmondParticipantI am all for developement by private enterprise.
January 22, 2012 at 11:42 AM #736566svelteParticipantThere is no need to tie a stadium to the Convention Center expansion.
Let the team pay for their own venue, I really don’t want to pay for it. The team can leave town for all I care.
Now the Convention Center expansion, that I will gladly help pay for.
January 22, 2012 at 11:47 AM #736567svelteParticipantAlso, it is no surprise that UT now runs an opinion piece supporting a downtown stadium.
You do know that Doug Manchester, the downtown developer*, now owns UT don’t you?
* – and large contributor to the Calif anti gay marriage prop.
January 22, 2012 at 4:55 PM #736571AnonymousGuest[quote=Bubblesitter]What is surprising it that normally conservative UT editorial is backing this.[/quote]The Spanos family and Manchester are both right wing idealogues. It’s nothing more than looking out for their own, and you can bet that despite Doug’s denial that he will find a way to profit from this.
January 22, 2012 at 5:38 PM #736573AnonymousGuestthe online responses to the article are comedic gold.
Un-f’n-belivable
Sean Painter
“Do it. If San Diego can become relevant, companies will want to move here, and things will get better.”Cesar Eduardo Perez
“In the end, San Diego needs to remain competitive with other cities who have similar sites (i.e. Chicago). And with L.A./Anaheim, San Francisco, and Las Vegas nearby, San Diego needs to get the infrastructure to attract people, great weather is not enough.”Allen Wiertzema
“Downtown is a slum neighborhood. If a stadium is built it would transform a slum into a high value property to bring greater tax revenue to the city, state and businesses.”Just a small sample of gems. Not a single coherent argument in support of the plan, plenty of evidence that forced sterilization is desperately needed.
January 22, 2012 at 11:07 PM #736589enron_by_the_seaParticipantIf the city is going to declare bankrupcy eventually, let’s might as well do that after building that mega stadium-plus-convention center-plus-arena-plus-library-plus-city hall built with overpriced unionized labor by the joint venture of the hotelier-developer-publisher of UT & builder-developer-owner of the Chargers.
January 22, 2012 at 11:24 PM #736590XBoxBoyParticipant[quote=Bubblesitter]What is surprising it that normally conservative UT editorial is backing this,
Bubblesitter[/quote]Bubblesitter, don’t be so naive. Doug Manchester is the financial backer of the MLIM LLC. You know, the folks that bought the UT last fall. One of the biggest developers in the county buys the local paper, and now that paper is a shill for boondoggle projects that Doug Manchester will make a killing on. Gee… now that’s a surprise.
No wonder this city is called enron by the sea.
January 23, 2012 at 3:00 PM #736621EconProfParticipantThese megaprojects seldom make sense for the taxpayer, and are a way for politicians, unions, and developers to all line their pockets. They typically hire “experts” to justify the project by promising unrealistic jobs, tourist spending, and phoney “multiplier effect” prosperity.
A recent Wall Street Journal editorial pointed out that in the last decade or so, Americans’ attendance at conventions is down some 30 percent, while cities have engaged in a kind of arms race to build more and glitzier convention centers by a like percentage. Sounds erily like a bubble is forming.January 23, 2012 at 3:21 PM #736622protorioParticipantBold would be investing in infrastructure that makes our city more livable, and ultimately inviting to visitors: greenbelts, expanded trolley (and to the airport), bicycle and pedestrian infrastructure, small-business friendly density, investment in University and El Cajon Blvd. to help make these great urban avenues productivity engines. Each of these contributes to the “city of villages” our founders envisioned, and draws people into to both the place and the idea of the place.
What we need less of is crony capitalism that a stadium project represents. The Convention Center, I’m all for.
January 23, 2012 at 3:57 PM #736623blahblahblahParticipantCertainly no major city has ever become a tourist mecca without an American football stadium paid for by the public but whose revenue goes to a few politically well-connected wealthy people. Everyone knows the only reason people go to New York is as a stopover point on the way to New Jersey to watch the Giants play. Amsterdam and London were little more than hellish malarial backwaters until NFL Europe came to town, bringing hordes of European fans of American football and their suitcases full of funny-looking colored money.
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