UhOhNoAgTag said:
Pretty sure Yancy is in favor of a convention center.
I am in favor of having the Aggieland Events Center.
We turn away dozens of trade shows annually for lack of a venue. We try to split trade shows into two venues to accommodate just a 2,000 attendee event, with lackluster and sometimes embarrassing results. Texas A&M generates large research and other symposiums that cannot be held in their own city. State association shows will go to Conroe or Waco or McAllen because these cities, despite being smaller or equal in size, have a multi-event facility designed for it while we do not.
We miss out on major ticketed concert events. Repeatedly. Again and again. In the home of the largest university in the nation we can't regularly host a ticketed concert event.
We miss out on car shows and boat shows and agricultural/farm equipment shows and medical equipment shows and you name it.
We miss out on family entertainment shows like Jurassic World Tour and Legoland Brickyard and Paw Patrol because we don't have a venue that will allow for ceiling rigging and vehicle entry and when we do, it's not big enough to make it worth it for the production to come here.
By not hosting such business and entertainment, the lost economic impact is enormous. The hospitality industry, hotels and restaurants take a hit. So does HOT tax and sales tax, leaving local citizens with less to do from an entertainment perspective, and more tax burden to bear.
The Local Multiplier Effect is lost for lack of a national scale venue. An outside dollar spent locally is worth 7 bucks in the city wherein in circulates. This generates further economic activity and jobs jobs jobs. Not just hospitality jobs but across the board.
A multi-events center at scale is an absolute no brainer in this community. But there are two crucial elements that'll lead to its success, or failure:
1) No one entity can go it alone. College Station can't do it alone. Nor Bryan. Nor the county. Not even Texas A&M. It will take all of us working together to make it pencil.
2) It must be managed by a private sector professional firm, such as Oak View Group or a competitor that will keep it full. 160 events per year.
Such a project will take as much cooperation as it will vision. There is no compelling reason why a community as dynamic and growing as ours is left with no multi-events center at scale. There is no reason our students and families should be missing out on the entertainment, why our university should be exporting its own events, or why our community should be getting blanked on the economic impact such a venue would bring.
So yes. I'm in favor of it, subject to #1 and #2 above.
Respectfully,
Yancy '95
My opinions are mine and should not be construed as those of city council or staff. I welcome robust debate but will cease communication on any thread in which colleagues or staff are personally criticized. I must refrain from comment on posted agenda items until after meetings are concluded. Bob Yancy 95