OaktownBear;842864389 said:
I preface this by saying I love Memorial and I personally would advocate for a more expensive price tag, but no we didn't "have to" get the seismic work done. There were other options like building a smaller stadium on the Edwards + site that would have been on much more stable ground (and where Memorial's original architect wanted the stadium to go. Or like building on an off campus site. Or like playing in the Colisseum or AT&T. Would those have been worth the savings? Feasible? No savings at all? I don't know because they were never realistically looked at as solutions. And while I and everyone else here might get misty eyed about Memorial, a lot of people who would foot the bill don't, and they had a right to a reasonable analysis.
I preface THIS by saying our facilities were criminally bad. But, no, we didn't "have to" do that. Was it a disadvantage? Absolutely. A $200M disadvantage? That is questionable. Did it make sense to build new earthquake facilities on a fault line in an extremely difficult site? Only if you were basically trying to hitch the wagon to a stadium retrofit. The facilities could have been less expensive. Heck, you could have made them part of a new stadium at Edwards.
I will also say that many academic disciplines have really bad facilities.
Good question. Understand, though, the project was hugely more expensive because of the fault line and the requirement to preserve Memorial.
Memorial won't be around in 200 years let alone 2000.
Versailles is incredible. Louis XIV looted the people of France to pay for it and well "Apres moi, le deluge"
In the late 1800's, Mad King Ludwig built an incredible, and incredibly expensive castle for his own pleasure. He finished and said "You know what? I'm going to build another EVEN BETTER castle!" His body was found in the lake six weeks later. And people love touring his castle to this day.
You know what the Pyramids and Versailles and Ludwig's castle and Memorial stadium all have in common? 1. I'm happy they exist. 2. I can be so because I didn't have to pay for them. Honestly, I don't think the joy that the Pyramids or Versailles have brought the world are worth the suffering and death many Egyptians and French endured because of them. And at least those people should have had a vote.
Honestly, what you are arguing here is exactly why people hate government today. Spend a whole lot of someone else's money to get something that benefits me. Fact is that if the athletic department had brought the cost of the project to the campus and asked for a vote, it would have crashed and burned. If you want to argue a plan of we need to build it, so do it and figure out the consequences later, how do you argue that it isn't the athletic department that should live with the consequences?
We got something big accomplished. It's regrettable that it was done in such a way that we have all this debt, it really is, but we got something big accomplished. This will benefit more than just you or me, it will benefit the whole university. Think of the glory, man, the glory!
I don't know if anyone ever crunched the numbers on doing it at Edwards. Did they? Bobodeluxe mentioned having a Stanford-type stadium there...
Yuk!
As far as why people hate government today, I disagree. People haven't hated our government when we've accomplished big things (think Marshall Plan, highway system, the Apollo program). They hate government when government pisses away its revenues, with nothing big to show for it. Heck, we're running a federal deficit now, with a huge national debt, but if Trump were actually massively rebuilding the infrastructure like he said he was going to, instead of running off his mouth and his Tweeter, he might actually be popular. (Not the wall, though, of course!)
I also don't feel too bad about the stadium expenditure because it's basically a drop in the bucket when you look at all the money in the Bay area right now. A lot of people are rolling in a lot of money. Some of this money needs to be "redirected", like to our stadium. Yes there are much greater needs for the money, certainly, even within the University, but we can have our stadium and there's plenty of money left over for other things.
Look, I actually abhor the idea that college sports has come to this (the "arms race" and all), but it is what it is and we need to compete. Before you pick apart my words again, okay, we don't "need to" compete, just as we didn't really "have to" do the seismic work or "have to" upgrade our facilities. We don't really "have to" do any of this stuff, even have a sports program. But we "should".