Back in
2012, the NRL was eager to tout the urbanist pleasures of Superbowl XLVI
in Indianapolis, where many of Superbowl week venues, including the stadium,
were within walkable distance of the host hotels. Four years later, the NFL keeps stubbing its urbanist
toe.
The first
urbanist bust was at Superbowl XLVIII. The
NFL failed to account for the increasing use of transit to reach major sporting
events and gave New Jersey transportation officials bad estimates of the division between car passengers
and transit riders for game day planning.
When far more fans used transit than expected, the results were
overcrowded cars and long wait times.
And now, in the run-up to Superbowl L, the NFL
has misread the changing urban realities once again.
Having
decided that most Superbowl festivities should be in San Francisco, rather than
45 miles south in Santa Clara where Levi’s Stadium is located, NFL officials
have been meeting with representatives of the City of San Francisco to discuss
event coordination. One request recently
made of the City was for the temporary removal of
the overhead electric bus wires along Market Street.
I understand
the motivation behind the request. The
overhead wires are ugly and detract from the vista down Market Street toward
the Ferry Building and San Francisco Bay.
I’ll celebrate on the day when evolving technology allows the wires to
be removed.
But until
then, the overhead wires and the buses fed by them are key links in the San
Francisco transit system. While the NFL
reportedly offered to reimburse the City for the estimated $1 million cost to
remove and later replace the wires, no acknowledgments were offered to the
commuters or businesses who would be inconvenienced by the weeks when the
transit system would be compromised.
Luckily for
all, the NFL recognized the problems with the request and soon withdrew it.
But having made the request at all shows urban colorblindness in NFL headquarters.
Choosing San
Francisco over Santa Clara as the center of Superbowl festivities correctly
acknowledged the fundamental role of major cities. But cities are multi-layered entities with
complex internal logic. To blithely
tinker with one element, such as a portion of the transit system, without
trying to understand the integrated whole was akin to buying the Mona Lisa because
of her enigmatic smile, but with the intention of adding braces.
It’s not
that cities can’t be modified. Indeed,
they can be and must be. But those
changes must be carefully proposed and vetted considering all the
ramifications, not suggested only to provide better photo opportunities for a
week of football tourists.
Hopefully,
the NFL will begin to grasp that urban reality before Superbowl LI.
Milestone
Note: The first post in this blog was published on the Monday after the
Thanksgiving weekend of 2011. Thus, this
post is the end of my fourth year. When
I began, I had no expectation of how long I would continue. But I kept finding topics about which I
wanted to write and somehow the years passed by.
Thanks for
coming along, reading, commenting, and being tolerant when I struggled to find
my voice.
I have no plans
yet to cease my efforts. Instead, I’ll
be back here in couple of days, starting my fifth year. I hope you’ll be here also. And if you want to bring a friend, I wouldn’t
complain.
Speaking of
coming back, my next post will be a look back at Black Friday Parking, with thoughts on my personal
interaction with an over-filled parking lot and links to some of the better
writing on the subject by others.
As always,
your questions or comments will be appreciated.
Please comment below or email me.
And thanks for reading. - Dave Alden (davealden53@comcast.net)
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