I'm not saying you're free to be an idiot but it's far from dangerous.
Just give a nod to the guy with the boombox and you're in the clear.

It is currently Mon Dec 11, 2023 2:09 am |
Moderators: MrSpall, bassjones, sevesd93, zenmandan
Do you have this somewhere for the rest of us to look at? I haven't seen any of the research or stats, and I'd like to see what you've read to support this opinion.R7Bass wrote:Although the research has been done. Most of the time statistics will hold true.
I'm all for property values going up in our neighborhood, but what kind of development will you find downtown? There's no more room there. I mean, they could build more high-rise apartments, maybe.We will know if it is working when residential developments start to pop up, if they do. I mean living downtown right now is no more expensive than most other areas of town..we want people to want to live there. Plus ...that will help my house value considering I live near lakeside park....and am a 3 min drive to the downtown area. I say lets give it a shot.
I found this to be interesting:But we’ve heard many ideas for big projects downtown that might act as a tipping point. What about a water park? What about a resort hotel that incorporated a water park – an attraction that might draw visitors from a wider area than a minor-league baseball game? How about an aquarium? How about a Circle Centre Mall on a Fort Wayne scale? How about an indoor sports facility – think of the success of the Spiece Fieldhouse on the north side of town – that could be used for amateur sports events year around? Or perhaps a series of smaller residential developments given healthy financial incentives by the city?
The report of the BaseballPLUS committee doesn’t comb the nation for an array of ideas for downtown projects that have worked; it examines one and only one idea: a downtown stadium. Perhaps that would nudge downtown toward a tipping point, but taxpayers ought to demand a thorough search for new ideas first. Then a panel that isn’t so entirely enchanted with baseball ought to weigh the costs and prospective advantages of many ideas.