2023 Year-End Boxscore Charts, Billboard Magazine
Yesterday, my SmartNews feed was on fire, with so many great articles. There were a series of articles by smaller communities, about how the quality of their city as an events-sports destination was high, despite the size of the community or whether or not they actually had a sports team, for example Fort Worth doesn't ("Here’s why Fort Worth’s Dickies Arena was named Billboard’s No. 1 venue in the world." Fort Worth Star-Telegram).
2023 Year-End Boxscore Charts, Billboard Magazine
- Top 40 Tours
- Top 30 Boxscores
- Top 10 Stadiums
- Top 25 Venues (cap 15,001 or more)
- Top 10 Venues (cap 10,001 to 15,000)
- Top 10 Venues (cap 5,001 to 10,000)
- Top 10 Venues (cap 5,000 or less)
- Top 10 Promoters Top Tours by Genre;
While I may have been right that the East End would have redeveloped, as the rest of Downtown was built out, the real issue is velocity of change, and the arena moved things faster, at least by 10 years, and helped to rebrand and reposition the City of Washington as an exciting place worth considering for work, commerce, and residential choice.
-- "Now I know why Boulder's Pearl Street Mall is the exception that proves the rule about the failures of pedestrian malls," 2005
Labels: Growth Machine/Urban Regime Theories, public finance and spending, real estate development, sports and economic development, stadiums/arenas, Suburban Sprawl Growth Machine, urban revitalization
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