A Nike Museum is probably the dumbest proposed "cultural" amenity I can think of. Don't they realize Nike is as equal an embarrassment to Portland as it is some kind of international brand? What kind of exhibits would they have? The Nike "Chinese Child Labor Sweat Shop" diorama? A Michael Vic dog fighting ring? That one shoe that started it all? Obviously, it will just be a Nike Town with a big gift shop.
I've seen this idea before. Take a shoddy urban area and over commercialize it, in part with public money. Shouldn't there be a Hard Rock Cafe in this covered area?
I love this plan. The Veterans' Memorial has to stay - the challenge is getting it used and popular. Adding the rooms for veterans' use and the community athletic center will sure help with that - that's awesome.
The bars and restaurants right outside the Garden should be really popular. You're right, Chris, they will probably be chain restaurants - because chain restaurants appeal to a lot of people. That's why they're chains! Sorry if that doesn't appeal to your indie cred or whatever, but newsflash - Americans love their cheesy fries.
I wonder how much Nike is putting in? Is the Nike museum really an extra cost? I wouldn't be surprised if they were ponying up MORE than the cost of their musem - we're probably funding some of the rest of this stuff with that money. Sure, a Nike museum may be a little silly, but who else is ready to kick in that kind of money to develop the Rose Quarter?
@KOifusion - Equating Nike with Chinese sweat shops is just ignorance. You're just repeating what some guy told you in a coffee shop. I've been there, toured the factories, talked to the workers, in Chinese - trust me, Nike has good business practices. They have to, because they have to protect their brand! It's always the Brand X stuff that doesn't need to care about their supply chain - the major labels are always paranoid about it. I know that's probably harder to write on a protest poster, sorry.
where is the velodrome and transgender bath rooms. This is going to be about as successful as Cucina Cucina and the other restaurants that used to inhabit the Rose Quarter.
I agree with Koifusion - a Nike museum would not be welcome in my city. Call me crazy, but celebrating a corporation which profits because of slave labor is just plain wrong.
Does anyone give a shit about the history of overpriced sneakers? I suggest that the museum include an interactive "guess who wore that shoe" exhibit, where patrons are asked to match the NBA player with one of several sweaty foot smells. Model it after those oxygen masks that fall from the ceiling during airline emergencies....whoop whoop.
it's awful tough to compete against the Blazers marketing and political muscle, particularly when they have a media/editorial blitz on their plan before the City publishes all the concepts submitted prior to the 1/8/10 deadline. Nonetheless, a community plan for Memorial Coliseum is now on the table. Check out http://www.marcpdx.org (successor to www.dobetterportland.org) and join the conversation about an alternative to the Blazers' plans for the Memorial Coliseum. Become a fan on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Make-Your-MA…
The bars and restaurants right outside the Garden should be really popular. You're right, Chris, they will probably be chain restaurants - because chain restaurants appeal to a lot of people. That's why they're chains! Sorry if that doesn't appeal to your indie cred or whatever, but newsflash - Americans love their cheesy fries.
I wonder how much Nike is putting in? Is the Nike museum really an extra cost? I wouldn't be surprised if they were ponying up MORE than the cost of their musem - we're probably funding some of the rest of this stuff with that money. Sure, a Nike museum may be a little silly, but who else is ready to kick in that kind of money to develop the Rose Quarter?
@KOifusion - Equating Nike with Chinese sweat shops is just ignorance. You're just repeating what some guy told you in a coffee shop. I've been there, toured the factories, talked to the workers, in Chinese - trust me, Nike has good business practices. They have to, because they have to protect their brand! It's always the Brand X stuff that doesn't need to care about their supply chain - the major labels are always paranoid about it. I know that's probably harder to write on a protest poster, sorry.