
Major League Winners : Using Sports and Cultural Centers as Tools for Economic Development
by Rosentraub; Mark S.-
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Summary
Table of Contents
Preface | p. xiii |
Acknowledgments | p. xvii |
The Author | p. xxi |
Urban Change, a Loss of Centrality, and New Destinies for Downtowns | p. 1 |
Introduction | p. 1 |
The Era of Subsidies and Hope | p. 2 |
What Can New Facilities Do for a Region? | p. 3 |
Subsidies and Strategic Investments: The Difference Defined | p. 3 |
Sports, Entertainment, and Culture for Image, Attracting Human Capital, and Economic Development | p. 4 |
The Beginning of an End to the Need for Central Cities | p. 5 |
Population Change | p. 5 |
Rise, Decline, and Lessons Learned from Festival Marketplaces | p. 7 |
Indianpolis and a Civic Image Strategy | p. 8 |
Rise of Sports and Culture for Revitalization | p. 9 |
Why Should Cities Care about Sports, Entertainment, and Culture? | p. 10 |
Human Capital and Amenities | p. 12 |
Are Sports, Entertainment, and Culture a City's Fool's Gold? | p. 13 |
Sports, Entertainment, and Culture: The Trinity for Redevelopment | p. 16 |
Cities, Sports Facilities, and Subsidies | p. 16 |
Franchise Values and Changing the System | p. 20 |
Misplaced Revenues, Misplaced Values | p. 22 |
Goal and Organization of This Book | p. 24 |
Endnotes | p. 26 |
Teams, Cities, Elites, and the Real Value of "Big-Ticket"Amenities | p. 31 |
A General Framework for Investments in Big-Ticket Items | p. 31 |
The Value and Appropriateness of Big-Ticket Items | p. 35 |
A City's Image | p. 35 |
Amenities and the "Creative Class" | p. 36 |
Amenities or Neighborhood Development? | p. 38 |
Amenities, Human Capital, and Economic Development | p. 39 |
Supply of Amenities | p. 42 |
Importance of Amenities | p. 43 |
Organic Urban Change versus Planned Redevelopment | p. 44 |
Delayed Development or Stagnation? | p. 45 |
Growth Poles | p. 47 |
Business Leaders and Urban Redevelopment | p. 49 |
The Unbalanced Playing Field between Teams and Cities | p. 51 |
What are Teams Worth? | p. 51 |
Implications of the Leagues' Control of the Supply of Teams | p. 54 |
How Did the Leagues Amass Their Economic Power? | p. 56 |
Challenging the Leagues in Court, at the Statehouse, or in Congress | p. 58 |
Revitalization and Development as an Alternative to Subsidies | p. 60 |
Summary | p. 60 |
Endnotes | p. 61 |
Indianapolis as the Broker City | p. 65 |
The Indianapolis Plan: Goals, Objectives, and History | p. 65 |
Indianapolis, Sports, and Redevelopment: What Was Built, How Much Was Invested, and Whose Dollars Were Spent? | p. 69 |
What Was Built? | p. 70 |
Who Paid How Much for the New Downtown? | p. 72 |
Has Indianapolis Been Changed by the Sports and Downtown Redevelopment Strategy? | p. 75 |
Maintaining Downtown Indianapolis | p. 75 |
Regional Economic Changes and the Centrality of Downtown Indianapolis | p. 78 |
Image of Indianapolis: Intangible Benefits and the Journey from "Indiana-No-Place" to Super Bowl Host City | p. 87 |
Challenges on the Horizon: Subsidies and Revenues | p. 90 |
Indianapolis: The Broker City to Be a Major League Winner | p. 94 |
Endnotes | p. 96 |
Shared Risk, Shared Returns: San Diego's Unique Partnership for a Ballpark, Convention Center Hotel, and a New Downtown Neighborhood | p. 99 |
Introduction | p. 99 |
Fiscal Challenges for the Padres | p. 100 |
"Poisoned Environment" for Sports Subsidies | p. 100 |
The Padres and the "Need" for a New Ballpark | p. 101 |
Politics of San Diego's Sports World | p. 102 |
Task Force II and the Generation of Substantial Public Benefits | p. 107 |
Public Benefits and the Stigma of Subsidies | p. 107 |
Scorecard on the Ballpark District: What Was Built | p. 112 |
The Scorecard: Taxes Generated | p. 115 |
The Ballpark District: Development, Land Use, and the Best Use of Urban Land | p. 117 |
The Ballpark District and San Diego: Mutual Risk in a New Model for Public/Private Partnerships | p. 124 |
Endnotes | p. 128 |
A White Elephant, an Arena, and Revitalization: Using Location and the Glitz of L.A. LIVE to Rebuild a Downtown Area | p. 129 |
Introduction | p. 129 |
Thinking Outside the Box: Bringing the Lakers and Kings Downtown | p. 130 |
The Lakers, the Kings, and the "Fabulous Forum" | p. 131 |
The "Fabulous Forum" and Its Limitations | p. 132 |
Arena Economics and the Appeal of Downtown Los Angeles | p. 133 |
Downtown Los Angeles: Liabilities and Assets | p. 136 |
Sealing and Selling the Deal | p. 140 |
Los Angeles' Investment and Returns | p. 141 |
Were the Taxpayers Protected? | p. 144 |
Rebuilding Downtown: Housing | p. 146 |
Rebuilding Downtown Los Angeles: L.A. LIVE | p. 148 |
Rebuilding Downtown: Other Iconic Projects | p. 153 |
Conclusions | p. 154 |
Endnotes | p. 157 |
Columbus, Major League Sports, and a New Downtown Neighborhood: A Failed Initiative and a Privately Built Arena | p. 161 |
Introduction | p. 161 |
Fighting for a Toe Hold in Professional Sports | p. 163 |
Sports Leagues and Their Placement of Teams in Cincinnati and Cleveland | p. 164 |
An Effort to Make Columbus Home to a Major League Team | p. 165 |
A Privately Built Arena, Real Estate Development, and a Unique Public/Private Partnership | p. 166 |
The Arena District Plan | p. 167 |
Financing the Arena District | p. 168 |
Columbus' Arena District: An Early Assessment | p. 171 |
Columbus' Arena District: What Was Built | p. 176 |
Conclusions | p. 177 |
Endnotes | p. 182 |
Can a City Win When Losing? Cleveland and the Building of Sports, Cultural, and Entertainment Facilities in the Midst of Population Declines and Job Losses | p. 185 |
Introduction | p. 185 |
The Crisis of Confidence | p. 188 |
Racial Conflict and White Flight | p. 188 |
Economic Contraction and Fiscal Default | p. 190 |
Cleveland's "Hail Mary" Pass: Downtown Revitalization as Symbols of Confidence | p. 191 |
Playhouse Square and a Citizen-Driven Public/Private Partnership | p. 191 |
Public/Private Partnership Mayoralty of George Voinovich and the Reinvigoration of a Regime6 | p. 192 |
Mayor Michael White and the Ballpark and Arena Proposal's Redux | p. 194 |
Large Subsidies and the Dispersion of Assets | p. 196 |
Results of Cleveland's "Hail Mary" Pass | p. 198 |
Private Investment Levels in Cleveland: Nonresidential Projects | p. 199 |
Private Investment in Residential Properties | p. 200 |
Tax Revenue Changes | p. 202 |
Job Retention and Employment Changes | p. 205 |
Extra Benefits from Building Amenities: Regional Cooperation | p. 207 |
Amending Cleveland's Major League Loser Status: New Leases | p. 208 |
Provision of Extraordinary Subsidies | p. 208 |
New Owners, New Possibilities | p. 210 |
New Leases for the Ballpark and Arena | p. 213 |
Business Leaders and Downtown and Community Development | p. 215 |
Conclusions | p. 217 |
Endnotes | p. 220 |
Stagnation, Crime, and Population Change: Reading's Volunteer Leadership Group and a Focus on Sports, Entertainment, the Arts, and Culture to Revitalize a Small City | p. 223 |
Introduction: Economic Change in a Small City | p. 223 |
Changes in a Small City: Economic and Racial Separation | p. 224 |
Reading in Brief | p. 224 |
Reading and Berks County Today | p. 226 |
Into the Breach: A Volunteer Leadership Group and Its Focus on Entertainment | p. 230 |
Reimaging Reading: From the Outlet Capital to a Mid-Atlantic Arts Center | p. 235 |
Reading's Leadership Group and Community Development | p. 238 |
Measures of Success | p. 239 |
Conclusions | p. 241 |
Endnotes | p. 243 |
Sports, Culture, Entertainment and Revitalization: Turning Subsidies into Strategic Investments | p. 245 |
Introduction | p. 245 |
Subsidies to Investments in the Aftermath of the Credit Crisis | p. 246 |
Value of Amenities for Economic Development and Revitalization | p. 248 |
Urban Tourism | p. 248 |
Lessons Learned: Similarities within Differences | p. 249 |
Lessons Learned: Advice for Other Cities Looking to Sports, Entertainment, and Cultural Amenities for Revitalization | p. 250 |
Recommendation 1: Value of Advertising | p. 250 |
Recommendation 2: Concentrate Amenities and Make Detailed Plans | p. 252 |
Recommendation 3: Build Neighborhoods or Iconic Architecture | p. 254 |
Recommendation 4: Link Private Sector Investments to a Commitment of Tax Money | p. 256 |
Recommendation 5: Organizations Needed to Succeed as a Broker City | p. 258 |
Recommendation 6: Prudent Risk-Taking for Confidence Building | p. 260 |
What Lesson Does This Offer? | p. 260 |
Recommendation 7: "Über-Plans" Unifying Public and Private Capital | p. 261 |
Recommendation 8: Constructively Involve Business Leaders in Downtown and Community Development | p. 262 |
Recommendation 9: Level the Negotiating Table | p. 264 |
Conclusion | p. 265 |
Endnotes | p. 266 |
References | p. 267 |
Index | p. 277 |
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