I'll believe this when it happens.
The Astrodome Conservancy unveiled its plan for the future of the Astrodome on Wednesday.
This is the latest attempt to do something with the Houston landmark that has been closed to the public for 15 years.
Wednesday's unveiling is a $1 billion plan known as "Vision: Astrodome," which includes four state-of-the-art buildings under the Astrodome's roof and a retail village.
Part of the inspiration is the High Line in New York -- with a boulevard that would cut through the Dome and connect to other NRG buildings.
Renderings from the Astrodome Conservancy, a nonprofit geared towards the preservation and redevelopment of the stadium that opened in 1965, show what that vision will look like.
The conservancy's founder says she's hopeful the project can attract "significant private dollars" to minimize the burden on taxpayers. Their plan is for $750 million to come from private sources.
I've written a few posts over the years about the fate of the Eighth Wonder of the World (see here, here, here, here and here), but nothing ever seems to happen to it. A 2018 plan by Harris County to repurpose it came to a halt when voters kicked Ed Emmett out of the County Judge's chair that November; this is the first significant proposal for the iconic structure I've become aware of since that time.
And I don't expect anything to come of it, because I don't think private investors are willing to put up the funds to renovate the Astrodome today any more than they were willing to do the countless previous times that new uses for the old stadium were proposed.
Aside from the price tag, there is opposition to the renovation plan from NRG Park's two largest tenants:
The Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo and the Houston Texans football team are decidedly cool to the plan.
The Rodeo issued a statement, "We have voiced our concerns on several occasions with the conservancy," they said. "There is no proposed or official plan that our organization has agreed to."
Reportedly, the Rodeo and the Texans favor demolishing the Dome to provide more parking.
Of course, neither the Rodeo nor the Texans have ever bothered to pony up the estimated $100 million it would take to demolish the stadium, either. The fact that the Astrodome has been designated a State Antiquities Landmark complicates its demolition as well.
All that to say that I expect for the Astrodome to continue to sit, unused - a modern-day ruin - for the foreseeable future.
No comments:
Post a Comment