Orlando will build Magic arena, renovate Citrus Bowl

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http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/news/story?id=2607712

ORLANDO, Fla. -- The city's downtown is getting a face-lift worth more than $1 billion, with a new arena for the Orlando Magic, a renovated Florida Citrus Bowl and a new performing arts center, officials announced Friday.
The projects were made possible by a recently approved penny-on-the-dollar increase in Orange County's hotel bed tax. The Magic's arena will run $480 million -- with the team on the hook for overruns and some $200 million in costs -- and the new performing arts center will cost $389 million.
It will take $175 million to gut and redo the aging Florida Citrus Bowl, which hosts two big college bowl games but is losing its primary tenant, the Central Florida football team, when the school opens an on-campus stadium next season.
"Downtown Orlando is undergoing a renaissance that few cities in Florida, or for that matter our country, have experienced," Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer said.
The Magic had long sought a new arena, arguing that the 17-year-old TD Waterhouse Centre doesn't offer the moneymaking amenities other NBA teams enjoy. Previous efforts, even at renovation, failed after the tourist economy dropped out following the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. The Magic could start playing in the new building, a few blocks from the old one, in 2010.
Integral to the deal was the club's promise to take on an additional $100 million in risk -- beyond an initial $100 million in cash, lease payments and operating expenses, Dyer said,
"We were able to find a risk position that we were comfortable with," Magic Chief Operating Officer Alex Martins said.
The Citrus Bowl renovation will be completed in several phases so the stadium can continue to host the Capital One and Champs Sports bowls and Florida Classic, which yearly features rivals Florida A&M University and Bethune-Cookman College.
"You're basically going to gut the 70-year-old structure below the two upper decks and you're going to put it back to modern standards, concourses, fan amenities, restrooms, points of sale and new seating," said Steve Hogan, executive director of Florida Citrus Sports.
He said it would also give the Orlando area its first outdoor amphitheater setting, hosting concerts from 5,000 to 25,000 people.
Just as important, Hogan said, it enables the Citrus Bowl to go after new clients -- more college football, NFL preseason games, soccer and others.
"The 12-game [college] season now is permanent. That's going to free up at least one extra game a year where the Notre Dame-type programs and the big programs in the country want to come through and do a recruiting swing, and play a game here," he said.
The new performing arts center will be home to the Orlando Philharmonic, Orlando Ballet and Orlando Opera, and host more than 330 events. It's planned to feature an 1,800-seat acoustic hall, a 2,800-seat amplified hall and 300-seat multipurpose hall.


Copyright 2006 by The Associated Press
 
Dont know how the area stuff works out, but Magic is going to be one heck of a team next season and for years to come
 
I used to live in Orlando and the difference here is that Orlando has more attractions for tourists than for locals...

They obviously see how sports (with some emphasis on "performing arts") can be for tourists and locals alike.

Of course a city like Orlando would generate more hotel taxes than Sacramento could ever dream of...
 
I used to live in Orlando and the difference here is that Orlando has more attractions for tourists than for locals...

They obviously see how sports (with some emphasis on "performing arts") can be for tourists and locals alike.

Of course a city like Orlando would generate more hotel taxes than Sacramento could ever dream of...
Exactly.
 
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