Pioneer Institute for Public Policy Research

Flier and Saturday’s Senate debateHappy Thanksgiving

Design it first and then cost it out

Steve PoftakBy Steve Poftak
November 23rd, 2009


Or maybe the title should be “borne back ceaselessly into the past”.

News reaches us that the Boston Convention Center Authority is looking to double its size, but ” they don’t know how much the project would cost or how it would be paid for” (from SHNS, sub req.) I’m going to go out on a limb and say that now is not a great time to be seeking additional funding, particularly with the inference of higher taxes.

The planning approach reminds me of the Governor’s quote about his Readiness Project/education reform package:

“We’re building a house,” he said. “You design it first and then cost it out.”

The task of figuring out the details will reportedly fall to a 25 member task force of the great and good. Not sure who is part of that group, since the Convention Center Authority’s has no info (as of 2:25 PM this afternoon) and press releases were last updated 363 days ago. (Mac Daniel, call your office!)

We’ve had some questions about the Convention Center in the past (here, here, and here, just to start) And we are skeptical of this plan, such as it is.

And there will be some who say — “but they just started the process”. Actually, the RFP for expansion planning was issued in July 2007.

Entry Filed under: News

1 Comment Add your own

  • 1. Cynic  |  November 23rd, 2009 at 8:57 pm

    Try http://www.t5boston.com – not that they’ve disclosed their twenty-five names yet, or even confirmed that they’ve selected them.

    I hope, as the process moves forward, that there’s some effort to break this plan down into its components. A huge new flagship hotel directly linked into the convention center actually makes a degree of economic sense – it maximizes the value of what we’ve already built, presumably wouldn’t require operating subsidies, and could be leased out to an operator to retire the construction costs. Doubling the size of the BCEC? That’s a tougher sell.

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