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What would you do...

Posted: Fri Sep 07, 2007 5:12 pm
by RumpleForeskin
with the Astrodome? First of its kind of course and a local historical landmark.

I liked the idea of a hotel casino with live music and restaurants, but that plan was scratched years ago when they could not get the city to budge on the gambling laws.


Looks like the redevelopment group is going to start the renovation process in April which will be privately funded and generate a huge tax credit for the investors.


http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/5114972.html
Investors' historic theme dropped for modern look
Hurdles remain before work on an upscale convention hotel could begin


By BILL MURPHY
Copyright 2007 Houston Chronicle


Entrepreneurs looking to turn the iconic Astrodome into an upscale convention hotel have scrapped a "best of historic Texas" theme for a more modern, streamlined look.

A faux Texas courthouse and other features that played on the state's past are out. Plans now call for including a section of the Dome's seats, part of the diamond and an overall contemporary design that plays up the building's cutting-edge nature when it opened in 1965.

"We're going to have rides. There could be air rides that take you off the ground and make you say, 'Wow,' " said Scott Hanson, president of Astrodome Redevelopment Co., the firm hoping to transform the Dome. "We're going to have a few of those. They would be easy-going rides that would show off the venue."


Meeting next week
Astrodome Redevelopment still has hurdles to clear before it begins work. Willie Loston, director of the Harris County Sports and Convention Corp., which oversees Reliant Park, will update the Commissioners Court on the company's progress in executive session Tuesday.

The court's approval is needed before work could begin. And Astrodome Redevelopment needs to work out revenue sharing and parking deals with the Houston Texans and the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo, the major tenants of Reliant Park.

But Hanson and Astrodome Redevelopment's chief executive, John Clanton, said the company is making progress and hopes to begin work on the interior as early as next April.

Hanson previously said the company had obtained financing for the $450 million project. But he and Clanton publicly announced the lender, Deutsche Bank, for the first time Thursday.

The Texas Historical Commission recently approved the company's renovation plans, qualifying it for a federal historic rehabilitation tax credit, Clanton said.

The tax credit was integral to Astrodome Redevelopment's financing application. As much as $350 million of the work on the $450 million project may qualify for the tax credit, which could be worth $70 million to Astrodome Redevelopment, Clanton said.


Good reason to alter course
Astrodome Redevelopment had good reason to scrap the best of Texas theme. The historical commission may not have approved its rehabilitation plan, and the company may not have received the tax credit, Clanton said.

The commission wanted the project to include some features of the building and to play up the Dome's status when it was dubbed the "Eighth Wonder of the World" upon its opening.

Atlanta-based Worthington-Hyde Partners have joined Astrodome Redevelopment and Senate Hospitality Group, which would operate the hotel, as partners in the project. Worthington-Hyde's sizable investment will reduce the amount that Astrodome Redevelopment must finance, Clanton said.


Would generate revenue
The convention hotel would employ 1,550 and generate nearly $23 million a year in state and local taxes, Hanson said.

The complex would have as many as 1,300 hotel rooms, ballrooms, convention meeting rooms, multiple restaurants, upscale shopping and one or more music venues. Swaths of Astroturf would be replaced with a series of ponds, fountains and tall trees.

A parking garage would be built around the Dome. County officials may require Astrodome Redevelopment to build a $15 million overhead ramp from the South Loop to the garage. Plans for a cineplex have been scrapped.

Hanson said he was convinced that the Dome hotel would be heavily booked.

Astrodome Redevelopment isn't seeking any public money to renovate the Dome, but has asked the county to consider paying for the $15 million ramp and an expansion of Reliant Park's air conditioning/heating plant, which could cost as much as $1 million, Hanson said.

Loston said, "We have not responded to that request. But this is a 100 percent privately financed project."

Posted: Fri Sep 07, 2007 5:48 pm
by Ace
Historic? I think "eyesore" would be more appropriate.

Posted: Fri Sep 07, 2007 5:55 pm
by smackaholic
OK. historic eyesore.

it pisses me off that we have perfectly functional buildings all over the place that are deemed "obsolete" and plowed under. Ofcourse this usually happens to gubmint owned buildings.

I got a 4 bedroom cape. Needs a new kitchen, windows, some plumbing work. I guess it's obsolete. It's almost ten years older than the dome. Guess, I oughta just bring in the D4 right fukking now and start pushing. I'll just tell my boss that I need a 1000 a month raise to finance my new crib.

Yeah, that'll happen soon.

Re: What would you do...

Posted: Fri Sep 07, 2007 7:14 pm
by Voice of Reason
RumpleForeskin wrote:What would you do...
...anything but your wife.

Posted: Fri Sep 07, 2007 7:16 pm
by PSUFAN
Convert it into a dog show emporium.

Your fat bitch will feel right at home. She can cluck at the poorly-shorn with RtS.

Posted: Fri Sep 07, 2007 7:45 pm
by RumpleForeskin
Couldn't agree more with you, smack. It seems like any structure built before 1950 west of the might Mississip is better off being leveled. H-Town just pours concrete over anything that old. After so many buildings were being demolished and new trendy structures were being erected, Houston scrambled to put together a restoration/redevelopment committee and we are now starting to see the old become the newly restored.

I'm pleased to hear they have decided to go this route with the dome. I know its nothing to look at and its less than 50 years old, but it IS the first of its kind and other than oil and the space program, the dome is what put Houston on the map.

Making it a hotel and convention center will offer more national bookings for the Reliant Stadium or the Reliant Center.

Posted: Fri Sep 07, 2007 8:01 pm
by smackaholic
are they gonna use it as a displaced mvscal barracks again when the next storm finishes off nawlins?

Posted: Fri Sep 07, 2007 8:34 pm
by RumpleForeskin
smackaholic wrote:are they gonna use it as a displaced mvscal barracks again when the next storm finishes off nawlins?
I hope not. That was an absolute disaster for our city.

Posted: Fri Sep 07, 2007 10:41 pm
by MgoBlue-LightSpecial
Whatever they do, let's home Rumplewife doesn't mistake the dome for a toilet.

Posted: Sat Sep 08, 2007 12:32 am
by Neely8
Why exactly do state governments continue to turn down gambling legalization? Either the state gets it or the indians move in and take all the money themselves. Wakey Wakey America!!!

Posted: Sat Sep 08, 2007 12:48 am
by TenTallBen
Not much you can do after this debacle. They spent over 250 million to get the stench out of the superdome. That's all they had in N.O. - You have a brand new jewel of a stadium right next door. Tear that shit down and build some nice high rise hotels....

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