Anonymous wrote:Idk. Did having it in Chinatown do much for those property values?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live and work in Alexandria, and don’t know anyone who thinks this is a positive thing.
Then expand your bubble.
This thread is about Alexandria, dumbass.
NP - Real life Alexandrian here. Suspecting you, like many of my neighbors, are incapable of much beyond your expressions of dissatisfaction and outrage.
This one of the more exciting things to happen to our area. Frankly, I'm sick of the repetitive complaint-filled convos about bike lanes, renaming streets, our crap schools and affordable housing. The arena the first improvement in a LONGGGGG time that the whole community can enjoy.
Or is that too much fun for you to handle?
Would you want this a 15-minute walk from your house?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live and work in Alexandria, and don’t know anyone who thinks this is a positive thing.
Then expand your bubble.
This thread is about Alexandria, dumbass.
NP - Real life Alexandrian here. Suspecting you, like many of my neighbors, are incapable of much beyond your expressions of dissatisfaction and outrage.
This one of the more exciting things to happen to our area. Frankly, I'm sick of the repetitive complaint-filled convos about bike lanes, renaming streets, our crap schools and affordable housing. The arena the first improvement in a LONGGGGG time that the whole community can enjoy.
Or is that too much fun for you to handle?
I live in Del Ray, a 15-minute walk from the proposed site, and I am not excited. I favor most development and would be happy if they tore down the big box stores there now and built denser multi-use retail and housing. But a 20000 seat arena is a different beast and is likely going to be a traffic disaster for Lynhaven and north Del Ray. I suspect those Alexandrians who are excited about this do not live right next door. Would you want this a 15-minute walk from your house?
With the 70 acres in discussion, exchanging the arena with housing would bring way more than 20,000 residents.
I’d much rather have people visit and spending their money, have 20,000+ live here full time and strain city resources further (schools, sewers, etc.).
If anything, the arena is the lesser evil compared to what could happen if planning and development were left to the fools on city council.
(And don’t thank/blame any of the them for this deal. The arena was far beyond their pay grade.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live and work in Alexandria, and don’t know anyone who thinks this is a positive thing.
Then expand your bubble.
This thread is about Alexandria, dumbass.
NP - Real life Alexandrian here. Suspecting you, like many of my neighbors, are incapable of much beyond your expressions of dissatisfaction and outrage.
This one of the more exciting things to happen to our area. Frankly, I'm sick of the repetitive complaint-filled convos about bike lanes, renaming streets, our crap schools and affordable housing. The arena the first improvement in a LONGGGGG time that the whole community can enjoy.
Or is that too much fun for you to handle?
I live in Del Ray, a 15-minute walk from the proposed site, and I am not excited. I favor most development and would be happy if they tore down the big box stores there now and built denser multi-use retail and housing. But a 20000 seat arena is a different beast and is likely going to be a traffic disaster for Lynhaven and north Del Ray. I suspect those Alexandrians who are excited about this do not live right next door. Would you want this a 15-minute walk from your house?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live and work in Alexandria, and don’t know anyone who thinks this is a positive thing.
Then expand your bubble.
This thread is about Alexandria, dumbass.
NP - Real life Alexandrian here. Suspecting you, like many of my neighbors, are incapable of much beyond your expressions of dissatisfaction and outrage.
This one of the more exciting things to happen to our area. Frankly, I'm sick of the repetitive complaint-filled convos about bike lanes, renaming streets, our crap schools and affordable housing. The arena the first improvement in a LONGGGGG time that the whole community can enjoy.
Or is that too much fun for you to handle?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live and work in Alexandria, and don’t know anyone who thinks this is a positive thing.
Then expand your bubble.
This thread is about Alexandria, dumbass.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am just furious over using tax dollars for this. Youngkin sucks so hard.
This isn't any different than the Amazon deal, and in fact the two are probably related. It's not a Youngkin thing.
It’s hugely different. Taxpayers shouldn’t fund sports arenas. It’s a terrible deal for taxpayers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live and work in Alexandria, and don’t know anyone who thinks this is a positive thing.
Then expand your bubble.
This thread is about Alexandria, dumbass.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live and work in Alexandria, and don’t know anyone who thinks this is a positive thing.
Then expand your bubble.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am just furious over using tax dollars for this. Youngkin sucks so hard.
This isn't any different than the Amazon deal, and in fact the two are probably related. It's not a Youngkin thing.
It’s hugely different. Taxpayers shouldn’t fund sports arenas. It’s a terrible deal for taxpayers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am just furious over using tax dollars for this. Youngkin sucks so hard.
This isn't any different than the Amazon deal, and in fact the two are probably related. It's not a Youngkin thing.
Anonymous wrote:I am just furious over using tax dollars for this. Youngkin sucks so hard.