Soccer is the only sport that I think would be wildly successful downtown. Smaller site allows for more location options and the urban core crowd is their prime demographic.shinatoo wrote: ↑Wed Jul 22, 2020 4:51 pm What % of downtown residents do you think will attend a Royals game downtown. If you want to fill a 35k seat stadium it will need to be 116% x 81 games. (I know, out of towners, conventioners and people working downtown will got too).
Personaly it think it will be a wash between the number that will attend because they don't have to drive and the number that won't because "OMG Parking and traffic".
First couple of years you will get a new venue bump.
It really is probably driven by corperate money. If they say they will by suites and sponserships they will build it downtown. Individual ticket holders aren't going to move the needle.
Downtown Baseball Stadium
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Re: Downtown Baseball Stadium
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Re: Downtown Baseball Stadium
Do you think Sporting KC would consider moving Downtown is given the option at some point? I know their current home is pretty new but maybe they'd consider a move considering how many new soccer teams are setting up homes in Downtown areas or closer to Downtowns.normalthings wrote: ↑Wed Jul 22, 2020 4:59 pm Soccer is the only sport that I think would be wildly successful downtown. Smaller site allows for more location options and the urban core crowd is their prime demographic.
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Re: Downtown Baseball Stadium
Sporting KC is where it is because of STAR Bonds and the adjacent Cerner office. Sporting doesn't really turn a profit even with their big subsidies. It is the events business where they make their money. Of course, that includes all of those Cerner related events that they host. There is no downtown soccer without downtown Cerner until the point where soccer becomes a profitable business on its own. Even then, I have doubts they would want to separate soccer and the office.Chris Stritzel wrote: ↑Wed Jul 22, 2020 5:18 pmDo you think Sporting KC would consider moving Downtown is given the option at some point? I know their current home is pretty new but maybe they'd consider a move considering how many new soccer teams are setting up homes in Downtown areas or closer to Downtowns.normalthings wrote: ↑Wed Jul 22, 2020 4:59 pm Soccer is the only sport that I think would be wildly successful downtown. Smaller site allows for more location options and the urban core crowd is their prime demographic.
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Re: Downtown Baseball Stadium
Ballpark Village and Busch are about the only thing going well for downtown STL. That positivity will spur development and all those old crappy parking lots and garages will be redeveloped. We are on the opposite end of the development spectrum here in KC. A ballpark, properly done and placed will just compliment the work that has been done and help continue it's awesome trajectory into the distant future.KC_JAYHAWK wrote: ↑Wed Jul 22, 2020 4:26 pm We don't want anything like Busch III. The Ballpark Village development has helped, but it's still surrounded by run down, crappy parking lots and parking garages built in the 1960s.
The game day experience in STL is hard to beat nationwide.
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Re: Downtown Baseball Stadium
I've been to 27 stadiums and I'd agree it's pretty good, at least top7, also due to lots of fans consider those games their religion.
Haven't we discussed this topic and every opinion in the new stadiums room like 100 times? I haven't seen anything new said yet.
Haven't we discussed this topic and every opinion in the new stadiums room like 100 times? I haven't seen anything new said yet.
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Re: Downtown Baseball Stadium
On another tangent. Back around 2000 I recall discussions about a possible decline in MLB interest with younger generations as video games and short attention spans could harm MLB the most as it's a slow game. Fast forward to recent times and of the major league sports, MLB has highest as well as increasing avg viewing age, from 52 in 2000 to 57 recently. Not a death spiral for MLB but is something to think about, in addition to more entertainment options than ever.
Multi-sport stadiums haven't been successful in the past but new methods might make it more palatable. And if MLB struggles more and more over time, might help for a new downtown stadium to accommodate other sports/events, that is not too tied to a diamond shape.
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/the-s ... 2017-06-30
Multi-sport stadiums haven't been successful in the past but new methods might make it more palatable. And if MLB struggles more and more over time, might help for a new downtown stadium to accommodate other sports/events, that is not too tied to a diamond shape.
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/the-s ... 2017-06-30
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Re: Downtown Baseball Stadium
It's already being discussed from time to time. Reason why they didn't add on to the stadium when they could have easily kept selling more and more tickets. Still selling really well, even with the bad season.normalthings wrote: ↑Wed Jul 22, 2020 4:59 pmSoccer is the only sport that I think would be wildly successful downtown. Smaller site allows for more location options and the urban core crowd is their prime demographic.shinatoo wrote: ↑Wed Jul 22, 2020 4:51 pm What % of downtown residents do you think will attend a Royals game downtown. If you want to fill a 35k seat stadium it will need to be 116% x 81 games. (I know, out of towners, conventioners and people working downtown will got too).
Personaly it think it will be a wash between the number that will attend because they don't have to drive and the number that won't because "OMG Parking and traffic".
First couple of years you will get a new venue bump.
It really is probably driven by corperate money. If they say they will by suites and sponserships they will build it downtown. Individual ticket holders aren't going to move the needle.
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Re: Downtown Baseball Stadium
Do you have a source? What I had posted earlier was what was told to me by ownership.TheSmokinPun wrote: ↑Wed Jul 22, 2020 10:32 pmIt's already being discussed from time to time. Reason why they didn't add on to the stadium when they could have easily kept selling more and more tickets. Still selling really well, even with the bad season.normalthings wrote: ↑Wed Jul 22, 2020 4:59 pmSoccer is the only sport that I think would be wildly successful downtown. Smaller site allows for more location options and the urban core crowd is their prime demographic.shinatoo wrote: ↑Wed Jul 22, 2020 4:51 pm What % of downtown residents do you think will attend a Royals game downtown. If you want to fill a 35k seat stadium it will need to be 116% x 81 games. (I know, out of towners, conventioners and people working downtown will got too).
Personaly it think it will be a wash between the number that will attend because they don't have to drive and the number that won't because "OMG Parking and traffic".
First couple of years you will get a new venue bump.
It really is probably driven by corperate money. If they say they will by suites and sponserships they will build it downtown. Individual ticket holders aren't going to move the needle.
Sporting KC is where it is because of STAR Bonds and the adjacent Cerner office. Sporting doesn't really turn a profit even with their big subsidies. It is the events business where they make their money. Of course, that includes all of those Cerner related events that they host. There is no downtown soccer without downtown Cerner until the point where soccer becomes a profitable business on its own. Even then, I have doubts they would want to separate soccer and the office.
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Re: Downtown Baseball Stadium
The biggest concern is going to be not having it surrounded by parking lots and be part of an actually urban development. Everyone get ready to fight on this.
They must have a hof museum open year around, event space, and hopefully year around restaurants and bars. Royals are out of town? Head to the stadium to watch.
It's time to rethink the way stadiums are built.
They must have a hof museum open year around, event space, and hopefully year around restaurants and bars. Royals are out of town? Head to the stadium to watch.
It's time to rethink the way stadiums are built.
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Re: Downtown Baseball Stadium
There already is a development planned. Based on the possible site, there's already development on two sides. One building and the transit hub already exist.WoodDraw wrote: ↑Thu Jul 23, 2020 4:08 am The biggest concern is going to be not having it surrounded by parking lots and be part of an actually urban development. Everyone get ready to fight on this.
They must have a hof museum open year around, event space, and hopefully year around restaurants and bars. Royals are out of town? Head to the stadium to watch.
It's time to rethink the way stadiums are built.
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Re: Downtown Baseball Stadium
I wouldn’t count out Cordish’s involvement considering they have now partnered with 3 MLB teams with more planned and contributed to the fees ability study. This could influence the final location as well but in other cities, the coordination for away games is very important to constantly provide guests and fans with an authentic game day experience, regardless if you’re in the stadium or across the street.WoodDraw wrote: ↑Thu Jul 23, 2020 4:08 am The biggest concern is going to be not having it surrounded by parking lots and be part of an actually urban development. Everyone get ready to fight on this.
They must have a hof museum open year around, event space, and hopefully year around restaurants and bars. Royals are out of town? Head to the stadium to watch.
It's time to rethink the way stadiums are built.
While likely far too expensive and impossible because of the need to relocate 670, that area would be more than ideal for the new stadium. It checks all the boxes except “affordable”.
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Re: Downtown Baseball Stadium
I would not count cordish out as well. It's a bit complicated because of the way the land is banked.DColeKC wrote: ↑Thu Jul 23, 2020 8:52 amI wouldn’t count out Cordish’s involvement considering they have now partnered with 3 MLB teams with more planned and contributed to the fees ability study. This could influence the final location as well but in other cities, the coordination for away games is very important to constantly provide guests and fans with an authentic game day experience, regardless if you’re in the stadium or across the street.WoodDraw wrote: ↑Thu Jul 23, 2020 4:08 am The biggest concern is going to be not having it surrounded by parking lots and be part of an actually urban development. Everyone get ready to fight on this.
They must have a hof museum open year around, event space, and hopefully year around restaurants and bars. Royals are out of town? Head to the stadium to watch.
It's time to rethink the way stadiums are built.
While likely far too expensive and impossible because of the need to relocate 670, that area would be more than ideal for the new stadium. It checks all the boxes except “affordable”.
You'll know this better than me, but I've heard cordish is looking for places to expand after their current spots are built out. South of Truman and east village would be natural choices. A new stadium would go in well with the timeline of when they've finished building out their current places.
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Re: Downtown Baseball Stadium
They are for sure interested in building outside of the official PNL district footprint and have explored a few locations. South of Truman is #1 and some thought has even been tossed around about 17th and Vine way down the development road. If a new stadium is in the east village, it's still good for the entertainment district along as they don't try to build their own smaller entertainment district directly next to the stadium. Can't imagine that happening as it would be counterproductive to already tax incentivized developments.WoodDraw wrote: ↑Thu Jul 23, 2020 12:41 pmI would not count cordish out as well. It's a bit complicated because of the way the land is banked.DColeKC wrote: ↑Thu Jul 23, 2020 8:52 amI wouldn’t count out Cordish’s involvement considering they have now partnered with 3 MLB teams with more planned and contributed to the fees ability study. This could influence the final location as well but in other cities, the coordination for away games is very important to constantly provide guests and fans with an authentic game day experience, regardless if you’re in the stadium or across the street.WoodDraw wrote: ↑Thu Jul 23, 2020 4:08 am The biggest concern is going to be not having it surrounded by parking lots and be part of an actually urban development. Everyone get ready to fight on this.
They must have a hof museum open year around, event space, and hopefully year around restaurants and bars. Royals are out of town? Head to the stadium to watch.
It's time to rethink the way stadiums are built.
While likely far too expensive and impossible because of the need to relocate 670, that area would be more than ideal for the new stadium. It checks all the boxes except “affordable”.
You'll know this better than me, but I've heard cordish is looking for places to expand after their current spots are built out. South of Truman and east village would be natural choices. A new stadium would go in well with the timeline of when they've finished building out their current places.
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Re: Downtown Baseball Stadium
1. S Truman and 18 Vine are interesting locations to expand to. S Truman being a great fit for a Cordish office tower.DColeKC wrote: ↑Thu Jul 23, 2020 12:50 pmThey are for sure interested in building outside of the official PNL district footprint and have explored a few locations. South of Truman is #1 and some thought has even been tossed around about 17th and Vine way down the development road. If a new stadium is in the east village, it's still good for the entertainment district along as they don't try to build their own smaller entertainment district directly next to the stadium. Can't imagine that happening as it would be counterproductive to already tax incentivized developments.WoodDraw wrote: ↑Thu Jul 23, 2020 12:41 pmI would not count cordish out as well. It's a bit complicated because of the way the land is banked.DColeKC wrote: ↑Thu Jul 23, 2020 8:52 am
I wouldn’t count out Cordish’s involvement considering they have now partnered with 3 MLB teams with more planned and contributed to the fees ability study. This could influence the final location as well but in other cities, the coordination for away games is very important to constantly provide guests and fans with an authentic game day experience, regardless if you’re in the stadium or across the street.
While likely far too expensive and impossible because of the need to relocate 670, that area would be more than ideal for the new stadium. It checks all the boxes except “affordable”.
You'll know this better than me, but I've heard cordish is looking for places to expand after their current spots are built out. South of Truman and east village would be natural choices. A new stadium would go in well with the timeline of when they've finished building out their current places.
2. We subsidize 18 Vine and P&L despite being pretty close. I don’t think a smallish entertainment area around the stadium is unrealistic.
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Re: Downtown Baseball Stadium
I could see some sort of "entertainment row" forming between the P&L District and the stadium district. Threading it through the civic center could turn City Hall into a bit of a tourist attraction, especially since its observation deck will be looking down at the stadium!
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Re: Downtown Baseball Stadium
We could also expand it over to the jail if that ends up getting replaced with something else
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Re: Downtown Baseball Stadium
An entertainment district for a stadium isn't enough of a reason to tear down a historic structure
The jail is also the police HQ from 1938. It should become part of such a district, not be torn down
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Re: Downtown Baseball Stadium
I think he was talking about the horrendous Jackson county jail. Please implode that thing!flyingember wrote: ↑Thu Jul 23, 2020 4:04 pmAn entertainment district for a stadium isn't enough of a reason to tear down a historic structure
The jail is also the police HQ from 1938. It should become part of such a district, not be torn down
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Re: Downtown Baseball Stadium
Or a serious redevelopment, it’s a good size
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