- October 17th, 2014, 12:51 pm
#465268
Also, IMHO, far better to have a smaller facility that you can fill up than a giant facility that's always half empty. The latter makes it seem like you're just being arrogant and overestimating your support, which is not a good image. That's probably what would happen if they expand Williams Stadium too soon, as well.
alabama24 wrote:Uhh... so no Doc's diner. :I chortle audibly.:I'm slightly at a loss as to why you are audibly chortling, but as I recall, Liberty specifically said that Doc's and the bookstore building WILL continue to exist. The fact that they don't show up on the current, preliminary plans is contradictory, but I would be more inclined to trust the information straight from the higher-ups. The people making the maps and renderings don't work for the university, and therefore they won't always be 100% accurate (e.g., the Residential Commons is called "Student Commons" on one map).
jcmanson wrote:Barber explained the drain on the University of having to continually set up and take down the Vines for convo, concerts, etc. is a big factor in this new arena.+1000. The university needs a space that can be almost completely dedicated to Convocation. An arena that has to be reconfigured on an almost-daily basis to serve so many different things is an unnecessary drain on resources and time. Plus, it detracts from the university's all-important image. It always looks and works better to have dedicated facilities for frequently recurring events, rather than constantly retrofitting "multipurpose" spaces. The latter approach too often results in a "jack of all trades, master of none" facility.
Also, IMHO, far better to have a smaller facility that you can fill up than a giant facility that's always half empty. The latter makes it seem like you're just being arrogant and overestimating your support, which is not a good image. That's probably what would happen if they expand Williams Stadium too soon, as well.