kennadog
Dog On It!
These are not new, I just came across them. There's a two part article done by Sacramento's public radio station. The other is the local Comstock's Business magazine. Both are excellent and unbiased, IMHO. They are too long to post here and you don't need to subscribe to read them.
http://www.comstocksbusiness.com/ccr-story-1105.htm
http://www.capradio.com/news/specials/arco/
http://www.comstocksbusiness.com/ccr-story-1105.htm
In the Belly of an Aging Beast
by Jeff Hudson
When you look at Arco Arena, what do you see?
How about 17,317 seats packed with noisy, happy Kings fans. The popular NBA franchise, which has been in Sacramento for more than 20 years, has one of the best attendance records in the league. The arena also hosts big-name rock concerts, touring ice shows, graduation ceremonies and more ‹ around 200 events a year.
That's an accurate image of Arco, as far as it goes. But that single snapshot of a busy building filled with people doesn't capture all of the significant details.
Take another look at Arco Arena and you'll see a facility that was built in 1988. Even at that time, it was a good deal plainer than other arenas of its era. Several arenas built in 1988 are now being replaced by fancier, more spacious arenas.
Look at Arco, and you can see an aging facility that's received comparatively few upgrades, with a leaky roof that's more than 10 years past its prime. Arco also has antiquated ice-making equipment that barely makes the grade.
http://www.capradio.com/news/specials/arco/
ARCO: Aging Arena...Uncertain Future
Last week, a Disney ice show visited ARCO Arena, and I was there, along with several thousand of kids, many of whom had souvenier noisemakers.
(Music, rising, “The Bare Necessities).
The lyrics of the song couldn’t be more fitting, because a growing number of people feel that ARCO Arena provides only the bare necessities as a venue, especially for pro basketball.
But most fans who go to events at ARCO are satisfied with things just the way they are, and don’t see any point in spending hundreds of millions of dollars to build something new. Especially the fans who’ve lived in Sacramento for a long time, and haven’t seen other arenas in other cities. “Ahh, it’s fine to me. I don’t come every game, I’m not a season ticket holder. But I don’t have a problem with it.”
“I think this one is still good enough.”
“It seems to be housing all the activities and the events that come here. I think it would be a waste of the community money to build a new one.”
However, if you talk with a fan who’s moved here recently from another city, you get a different view. “It’s definitely starting to become a dated arena. A new arena really can revitalize the city, as San Jose Arena did for San Jose."
I also spoke with a UC Davis student from Los Angeles. He’s used to attending games at the Staples Center, a $330 million venue that opened in 1999. He’s not impressed with ARCO. “Looking at the standards of construction, in comparison with the Staples Center, you basically sat back and think, Wow, this is pretty crappy.”
The facts are that ARCO is one of the oldest and smallest arenas used by an NBA team. ARCO was built seventeen years ago for $40 million dollars, at a time when cities like Detroit and Milwaukee built bigger arenas for $70 to $90 million dollars. Another 18 cities built NBA arenas in the ‘90s, and seven more have opened since 2000.
Matt Mahood, president of the Sacramento Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce, says that ARCO simply doesn’t measure up. “The folks that built it, they did a great job getting it built, because it needed to get done. But they did it in a hurry, and on the cheap. So a lot of the systems and the mechanisms that were actually in the facility when it was built are now becoming obsolete.”
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