Title: Business Briefing: 102808
1Center City
Business Briefing 10/28/08
2Why Focus on Downtown?
- Heart of the Community
- Economic Hub of the Region
- Where conventioneers spend time and money
- Symbol of Civic Pride/Reflects our Image to the
World - The Place for Living, Working, Learning,
Enjoying, and Investing - Job Creation/Business Incubation Center
- Enhances Regional Property Values
3Guiding Principles
Continue to reinforce Downtown as the unique
cultural business, entertainment, retail and
civic center of the region.
4Guiding Principles
- Attract public uses that serve the region
- Support expansion of entertainment and restaurant
facilities - Attract traditional and e-commerce businesses
- Improve access and parking systems
- Expand the sense of place of downtown by
integrating areas east of I-65 - Build on the Medical Center and other
institutions as important economic engines
5Louisvilles CompetitivenessRests on Downtowns
Success
A Successful Downtown is Key toLouisville
Keeping and Attracting Workers from our Region,
the World and the Companies that Hire them
6Executing the Strategy
4 Billion in play momentum is crucial
7Hotels and Amenities
Downtown has added nearly 1200 hotel rooms since
2003
New attractions are added each year, bringing
millions people downtown
8Marriott
9Fourth Street Live!
2005 Urban Land Institute Award for Excellence
10Muhammad Ali Center
5 Star Award, Best New Attraction, 2006 North
American Travel Journalists Association
2006 Best Places Award PathFinders Travel Magazine
11Waterfront Park
Top Ten Urban Parks in America Urban Land
Institute
12Downtown Arena
Currently under construction
13Details of the Public Realm
14What we Need
- Additional quality entertainment
- 4th Street Live! is not sustainable on its own
- Mixed-use development
- Development of dead zones
- Destination retail
- The number one request of visitors and
conventioneers - 77 percent of conventioneers are dissatisfied
with shopping Downtown
15Center City District Mixed Use
16City Center District Fills in crucial
missing Link of Water Company Block
17City Center District Destination Retail
18The Impact on Louisville
- Studies show vibrant downtowns contribute to
wealthy suburbs - Creation and retention of jobs
- Attraction of more visitors and conventions
- Large scale development creates opportunities for
small/mid-size development
19Economic impact of the deal
- Hospitality and Entertainment a robust and
resilient part of our economy - Jobs
- 3000 Jobs (1,000 to build, 2,000 ongoing)
- Arguably the largest development opportunity in
the Commonwealth
20Cordish the Right Partner
- Fourth Street Live! exceeding expectations
21Cordish is the Right Partner
- Has been a major investor in our city for over a
decade - World class developers and managers of
entertainment and retail - properties
- Has established relationships with major
- restaurants and retailers
- Has exceeded expectations with the
- development and management
- of Fourth Street Live!
- Has a proven track record
22Competitive Capital
23City Governments Goals
- To create a larger retail and entertainment
district - No city guarantee for bonds or direct
construction subsidy - Continue to reduce the percentage of city
participation in development projects - The city would not give away the land or
buildings it owns
24City Governments Goals
- That the Gardens would be redeveloped as part of
any project - Retail sales of traditional goods would be a key
component of any plan - Maximum advantage would be taken of the new State
TIF program to drive as large a project as
possible - Cordish would need to be the vendor because of
their current investment in Louisville, track
record of larger development nationwide and their
commitment to urban centers
25The Deal For Success
- Proposal outlines a 450 million project of mixed
use urban redevelopment, requiring a minimum of
40,000 square feet of retail space - Louisville Gardens will be redeveloped
- City has design control
- The city will purchase the land, leasing it to
the developer
26The Deal For Success
- 90 of the already approved TIF revenue used to
reimburse the developer for the public
infrastructure portion of the project will come
from state taxes - The only direct subsidy to the developer is 2.5
million for shared project design costs - No city guaranteesall risk is the developers
27How To Be a Partner
- Show your support
- Organizations adopt a resolution of support
- Leaders write letters to the editor
- Individuals write letters to your Council
representative