Bringing the USS John F. Kennedy to The Shipyards: Can We Do It?

Started by MusicMan, June 19, 2011, 11:54:46 AM

Ocklawaha

Quote from: MusicMan on June 20, 2011, 02:01:51 PM
Honestly, would this be the single best thing we could do to immediately jumpstart a downtown renaissance.

Not even close, after the 'NEW' wore off it would settle into a 1,000 to 2,000 person a day museum and the sale of a tee shirt, or post card will not a downtown make.

Likewise a heritage streetcar can't do the job either, it will take a whole streetcar line and the typical TOD that follows it around the country. That TOD, banking, retail, restaurants, residences, offices etc...  THAT will make a new downtown.  This stuff follows streetcars everywhere, but it doesn't touch museums
.

OCKLAWAHA


Doctor_K

Quote from: Ocklawaha on June 20, 2011, 02:55:36 PM
Quote from: MusicMan on June 20, 2011, 02:01:51 PM
Honestly, would this be the single best thing we could do to immediately jumpstart a downtown renaissance.

Not even close, after the 'NEW' wore off it would settle into a 1,000 to 2,000 person a day museum and the sale of a tee shirt, or post card will not a downtown make.

Likewise a heritage streetcar can't do the job either, it will take a whole streetcar line and the typical TOD that follows it around the country. That TOD, banking, retail, restaurants, residences, offices etc...  THAT will make a new downtown.  This stuff follows streetcars everywhere, but it doesn't touch museums
.

OCKLAWAHA

Well yes.  However - that 1K to 2K per day potential visitor count is 1K to 2K more than is going downtown now...
"Imagination is more important than knowledge. For while knowledge defines all we currently know and understand, imagination points to all we might yet discover and create."  -- Albert Einstein

wsansewjs

Quote from: Ocklawaha on June 20, 2011, 02:55:36 PM
Quote from: MusicMan on June 20, 2011, 02:01:51 PM
Honestly, would this be the single best thing we could do to immediately jumpstart a downtown renaissance.

Not even close, after the 'NEW' wore off it would settle into a 1,000 to 2,000 person a day museum and the sale of a tee shirt, or post card will not a downtown make.

Likewise a heritage streetcar can't do the job either, it will take a whole streetcar line and the typical TOD that follows it around the country. That TOD, banking, retail, restaurants, residences, offices etc...  THAT will make a new downtown.  This stuff follows streetcars everywhere, but it doesn't touch museums
.

OCKLAWAHA

A great example of actual 500 to 1.5K person per day aircraft carrier museum is the legendary Blue Ghost, the USS Lexington CV-16.

http://www.usslexington.com/

-Josh
"When I take over JTA, the PCT'S will become artificial reefs and thus serve a REAL purpose. - OCKLAWAHA"

"Stephen intends on running for office in the next election (2014)." - Stephen Dare

MusicMan

............... times 365 days equals 300,000 to 400,000 more people downtown.

I'll take that as a catalyst to even bigger and better things....

Like an IMAX Theater...............................  (Another 200,000 people)

And a Maxwell House Tour and Cafe  ................ (Another 100,000 )

Next thing you know a big hotelier buys the structure next too The Berkman and you have
  Wyndam at The Shipyards  .................................


MusicMan

Just dawned on me. Art walk is like an extra 2000 people downtown and that is one of the few times downtown Jax seems like a cool, thriving area.

thelakelander

Just plyaing devil's adovocate here.  Which would have the greater economic impact?  Placing a floating ship museum that would take up nearly all of the shipyard's waterfront, reopening a full blown shipyard or mixing the uses for the wharves as well as the land?


Patriot's Point - Charleston


Metro Machine Corp's shipyard in downtown Norfolk


Fisherman's Wharf in San Francisco
"A man who views the world the same at 50 as he did at 20 has wasted 30 years of his life." - Muhammad Ali

acme54321

Here's an interesting comparison:

http://maps.google.com/maps?q=philadelphia,+pa&hl=en&ll=39.888715,-75.182147&spn=0.011723,0.027831&sll=30.334954,-81.655884&sspn=1.687785,3.562317&t=h&z=16

The carrier is the USS JFK, in the basin across the yard there are 3 "skinny" boats, one of those is the USS Charles Adams.  Notice the slight size difference.

I don't know why there is even consideration of bringing a supercarrier to downtown.  It's either going to stick literally halfway across the river, or take up a quarter mile of waterfront.  It just doesn't make sense.

MusicMan

Well it does not have to be a SuperCarrier, but some ship or set of ships that would draw locals (meaning every person who lives within 125 miles) and those traveling through (North or South bound) to come downtown to spend the day (4-6 hours). THAT'S WHATS MISSING DOWNTOWN. SOMETHING TO DRAW PEOPLE THERE 365 DAYS A YEAR.  Once you have a steady flow of "tourists" coming downtown all the other things will follow.


MusicMan

There is enough room at The Shipyards for a 3 ship floating museum, a Maxwell House Cafe and Tour, an IMAX Theater, plus a St Johns River Aquarium. The combination of these items would provide enough activity that a typical family of 4 could spend an entire weekend downtown, stay busy, and have a great time.  Combine that with the concerts and special events, Jags football, the Suns...... We would have arguably the best downtown in Florida,
all in a 2 mile stretch from the Times Union PAC to Everbank Stadium.

wsansewjs

Quote from: MusicMan on June 22, 2011, 03:21:31 PM
There is enough room at The Shipyards for a 3 ship floating museum, a Maxwell House Cafe and Tour, an IMAX Theater, plus a St Johns River Aquarium. The combination of these items would provide enough activity that a typical family of 4 could spend an entire weekend downtown, stay busy, and have a great time.  Combine that with the concerts and special events, Jags football, the Suns...... We would have arguably the best downtown in Florida,
all in a 2 mile stretch from the Times Union PAC to Everbank Stadium.

Why don't you suggest that to TransformJax?

-Josh
"When I take over JTA, the PCT'S will become artificial reefs and thus serve a REAL purpose. - OCKLAWAHA"

"Stephen intends on running for office in the next election (2014)." - Stephen Dare

fieldafm

A supercarrier museum would be a worse idea than a publicly subsidized amusement park at the Shipyards site.  BTW, we barked up that tree before with the Saratoga.

It's going to cost the group trying to bring the Adams downtown around $50million, and they just hope and pray they can make enough to keep up with operating and maintenance costs.
I can tell you, the Kennedy would cost more than the Adams.

The Kennedy would also stick out so far you could almost jump on to it from the Bishop Kenny football field.... which would effectively cut off the channel that currently brings small cruise ships downtown.

That's a WHOLE lotta imaginary money for the city to be coughing up at a time when libraries are looking to be shut down to close gaps in the city budget.

Let's be a little realistic here.

QuoteHonestly, would this be the single best thing we could do to immediately jumpstart a downtown renaissance.

The single best thing we can do immediately is to allow small business to open and operate downtown without having to deal with the crippling bureacracy, assinine anit-pedestrian policies and predatory parking monopolies... all while programming more events.  All of which cost very little.

thelakelander

An aquarium would cost even more.  Atlanta's cost $290 million.

QuoteIn November 2001, Bernard Marcus announced his idea to construct an aquarium as a present to Atlanta, Georgia, that would encourage both education and economic growth. Marcus and his wife Billi visited 56 aquariums in 13 countries to research and design a structure, and finally donated $250 million toward Georgia Aquarium’s construction.[5] Major corporations including the Coca-Cola Company, Turner Broadcasting, Home Depot, UPS, AirTran Airways, AT&T, Georgia-Pacific, Time Warner, SunTrust and Southern Company contributed an additional $40 million.[5] The corporate donations allowed the aquarium to open debt free.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georgia_Aquarium
"A man who views the world the same at 50 as he did at 20 has wasted 30 years of his life." - Muhammad Ali

Ralph W

It's amazing how, in spite of the books being in the red and so many in our governmental structure crying the sky is falling, there always appears to be money flowing for just about anything you can imagine. It's a few thousand here and there, a medium bite for the artificial soccer grass, a bite last year for improvements to another ball field (that got a lot of press here on MJ) and a doubling of costs for a courthouse not even named a Taj Mahal as was the one in Tallahassee, which cost quite a bit less than ours.

We gave away about 4 million to the Jaguars (our share of the naming rights for the stadium). We are willing to give another 2.5 million to Everbank to move their operation downtown and maybe land another 200 jobs. Do they give the money back if projections are not met within a year or some other time frame.

We are willing to give JTA a chunk of land for a bus station which will be a distance from the proposed hub. Look at the map. JTA and FDOT already owns more property around and closer to the Terminal that should be used first and with a better construction plan and then the city will have the adjacent land which will be worth much more for commercial development in proximity to the transportation hub.

acme54321

The shipyards needs to be a mixed use development like was planned all along.  Putting some gimmicky attraction (*cough* landing *cough*) there is not going to solve downtown's problems.  We need to put people there.  There should be 100ft yachts in that marina not a supercarrier or some 3 other ships.  Get real here.