Tulsa shouldn't ignore advice, works of neighbors

 
By Steve Lackmeyer | Published: August 28, 2007    Comment on this article Leave a comment

For an Oklahoma City resident with no sense of rivalry or ill will toward Tulsa, a visit to the state's second-largest city can be an education in perception and prejudice.

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A crane lifts pieces of Tulsa's BOK Arena into place as construction continues on the structure. The arena is expected to open in September 2008. By Richard mize, the oklahoman
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While visiting Tulsa recently, I couldn't help but ask various downtown civic leaders about their ambitious Vision 2025 Program — a batch of improvements that are inevitably compared with Oklahoma City's Metropolitan Area Projects.

The questions weren't meant to be inflammatory.

Why, for example, was a site surrounded by large institutional properties like the U.S. Post Office, Tulsa Sheriff's Office and City Hall, chosen as the site for the city's new arena? Why not instead build an arena between two fledgling entertainment areas, the Brady and Blue Dome districts?

And why, in a city world-renown for its Art Deco architecture, would one not do everything possible to restore the one surviving grand hotel — the Mayo — back into a hotel instead of housing?

Experienced hands in downtown Oklahoma City share such questions. But their counterparts in Tulsa — the ones I've visited with — seem much more interested in promoting their current course than to stop and reconsider.

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