Posts Tagged ‘Buffalo Bills’

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Sun Nov 16th 2008 at 11:39am UTC

“New Ideas Require Old Buildings”

Sunday, November 16th, 2008

Buffalo has lots of them – and great ones at that. Nicolai Ouroussoff in today’s NYT:

Buffalo was founded on a rich tradition of architectural experimentation. The architects who worked here were among the first to break with European traditions to create an aesthetic of their own, rooted in American ideals about individualism, commerce and social mobility. And today its grass-roots preservation movement is driven not by Disney-inspired developers but by a vibrant coalition of part-time preservationists, amateur historians and third-generation residents who have made reclaiming the city’s history a deeply personal mission. At a time when oil prices and oil dependence are forcing us to rethink the wisdom of suburban and exurban living, Buffalo could eventually offer a blueprint for repairing America’s other shrinking postindustrial cities. Touring Buffalo’s monuments is about as close as you can get to experiencing firsthand the earliest struggles to define what an American architecture would look like.

The city’s rise began in 1825 with the opening of the Erie Canal, which opened trade with the heartland. By the end of the 19th century the city’s grain silos and steel mills had become architectural pilgrimage sites for European Modernists like Erich Mendelsohn and Bruno Taut, who saw them as the great cathedrals of Modernity. In their vast scale and technological efficiency, they reflected a triumphant America and sent a warning signal to Europe that it was fast becoming less relevant.

Yet it is the parade of celebrated architects who worked here as much as the city’s industrial achievements that makes Buffalo a living history lesson. Daniel Burnham’s 1896 Ellicott Square Building, with its mighty Italian Renaissance facade, towers over the corner of Main and Church Streets. Just a block away is Louis Sullivan’s 1895 Guarantee Building, a classic of early skyscraper design decorated in intricate floral terra-cotta tiles.  Across town, Henry Hobson Richardson built his largest commission: the 1870 Buffalo State Asylum for the Insane, composed of a pair of soaring Romanesque towers flanked by low brick pavilions. Light and air poured in through tall windows; spacious 18-foot-wide corridors were designed to promote interaction among the inmates, an idea that would be refined by Modernists in their communal housing projects decades later. But it was Wright who made the decisive leap from an architecture that drew mainly on European stylistic precedents to one that was rooted in a growing cultural self-confidence. Wright built two of those great pillars of American architecture here, the 1904 Larkin Building and the 1905 Darwin D. Martin House.

I’ve been a Buffalo fan since I got to experience its great architecture as a young visiting professor in the University of Buffalo’s School of Architecture in the early 1980s. Now combine this gift with the economic heft of the mega-region and there is a great deal of potential. The Bills are already playing some games in Toronto; cross-border trade and commerce is substantial. The economic crisis will likely spur once-in-a-lifetime infrastructure projects to connect the Canadian hubs of the mega-region – imagine a new super-high-speed tail line spanning Windsor, Toronto, and Quebec City. Is there a way to extend that kind of connectivity across the border to Buffalo and other U.S. cities? That could be just the spur that would activate the market for Buffalo’s tremendous history, authenticity, and quality of place.

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Mon Nov 10th 2008 at 8:23am UTC

Tor-Buff Bills

Monday, November 10th, 2008

Greg Easterbrook in The Atlantic:

The Bills could help forge mutual affection between the cities—even a regional identity. Buffalo’s civic promotion has generally reached southward; in this newly globalized world, it should reach northward, toward a country that is as underappreciated among nations as Buffalo is among cities.

Connections to cosmopolitan, multi­cultural Toronto might change Buffalo’s image from backward-­focused to wave-of-the-future. Toronto is growing by leaps and bounds, and some portion of the growth may already be spilling over; most of the immigrants to Buffalo in recent years were Canadian. Buffalo offers urban living free of traffic jams and boasts one of the nation’s last under­developed stretches of premium waterfront. During its City of Light heyday, when Buffalo was the first electrified metropolis, Frank Lloyd Wright, Frederick Law Olmsted, and other fabled names designed homes and parks. In the lovely Delaware Park area, magnificent Beaux Arts homes sell at exceedingly low prices compared with homes in elite U.S. cities—or in Toronto.

So long as the Bills keep a foot in the city, they keep alive the dream of a Super Bowl win—a hope that an infusion of Loonies (Canadian dollars) might sustain. And should the Bills win the Super Bowl, Buffalo will return to national prominence. I don’t just think this will happen, I know it will.

It’s all about the mega…

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Wed Jun 18th 2008 at 10:22pm UTC

Buff-Tor Bills

Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

Torbuff
This new logo was released today. So how many cross-border football teams are there? The power of the mega …

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Sun Jun 15th 2008 at 2:29pm UTC

Putting the Buff in Tor-Buff-Chester

Sunday, June 15th, 2008

Buffalo_4

Here’s my piece in today’s Buffalo News.

There’s great excitement brewing in Toronto, where I live, over the
fact that the Bills are coming to play eight “home” games (five regular
season and three preseason) there over the next five years.

As
a longtime Bills fan and former Buffalo resident — I lived off Elmwood
Avenue and taught at the University at Buffalo in the early 1980s,
during which time I braved the cold Buffalo winters to have some of the
greatest football experiences of my life — I have to admit I was one of
the first in line to get my tickets. Rumors swirl that Toronto
interests eventually will acquire the Bills and move the team north.
For some, this is a signal that Buffalo, once the wealthier and more
vibrant of the two cities, will lose not just its home team but its
big-league status — yet another signal of the once-great industrial
mecca’s fading glory.

Instead of bemoaning Buffalo’s loss or
cheering Toronto’s gain, the binational Bills actually point the way to
a better future. In fact, when asked at a major meeting of Buffalo area
leaders several years ago (and well before I moved to Toronto) what I
would suggest to revitalize the region, I blurted out, “become a part
of Tor-Buff-Chester” — a clunky moniker for the economic powerhouse
region stretching from my new hometown to Buffalo and Rochester.

More here. That’s the Buffalo News graphic that accompanies the piece.

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Sun May 25th 2008 at 10:17am UTC

Mega Ball

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

Toronto1

Mike Tanier over at Football Outsiders sees the power of the mega-region:

Buffalo has long been one of those in-between cities: small by international
standards, but large enough to host the Bills and the NHL Sabres. Now, Buffalo
is close to losing some of its big-league luster. The Bills will play three
preseason and five regular season games in Toronto, starting this year and
ending in 2012. The so-called Toronto Series is a likely precursor to a
permanent move to Canada. …

This region spans two nations: the Buffalo-Rochester area in western New York,
and the Toronto metro area in southern Canada. Toronto is the financial capital
of Canada, and if you yoke its economy onto Buffalo-Rochester’s, you get a
powerhouse mega-region.

Richard Florida, economist and author of Who’s Your City?, explains
the mega-region concept. “Mega-regions are the driving forces of the world
economy. A mega-region is an area that hosts business and economic activity on a
large scale, generating a lion’s share of the world’s economic activity and an
even larger share of the world’s innovation and technological discoveries.”
Toronto-Buffalo-Rochester (TBR) is one of just 40 significant mega-regions in
the world. According to Florida, it’s responsible for $530 billion in economic
output. It also ranks highly among world mega-regions in worldwide innovation
patents and what Florida calls “star scientists,” two indicators that TBR is
positioned to compete against other regions as a high-tech research and
industrial center.

Strapping U.S. and Canadian cities together seems a little disingenuous at
first, but Florida explains that it’s vital to everyone’s financial interests to
think outside the borders of states and nations. “Much of our public policy
ignores the rise of mega-regions and, sometimes, works against them. If we want
to bolster economic competitiveness, policy leaders across country borders and
state lines must pursue policies that take mega-regions into account.”

Buffalo and Toronto are just a few hours apart; Maple Leafs fans often travel
to Buffalo when their teams play the Sabres, and Buffalo baseball fans often
take day trips to watch the Blue Jays. By moving across the
border and closer to the center of the TBR mega-region, the Bills can acquire a
much-needed influx of corporate-caliber cash. “The Bills are like your parents
who bought their house 50 years ago,” Robinson explained. “Their mortgage is
paid off, so they don’t need a lot of income to get by.” The Wilson family can
turn a tidy profit on television revenues, but the next owners will cough up as
much as $800 million. They’ll need luxury box revenue and other income sources
to offset their initial debts. “We don’t have a deep stable of companies,”
Robinson said. “The Bills couldn’t dream of selling a PSL.” Ideally, Toronto
would provide the companies, with Buffalo providing the loyal fan base.

It’s one thing to embrace macroeconomics, but quite another to root for a
team that sings a different national anthem before games. While Bills fans are
among the most loyal in the NFL, Robinson is not sure how many
would follow the team to Canada, not when the Steelers, Browns, Jets, Giants,
and Patriots offer attractive regional rooting interests. “Over time, it would
settle into the relationship locals have with the Blue Jays,” Robinson said.
“The Bills would be a nearby team to go to.”

However, the Toronto Series, with its multi-venue format, could help fans
acclimate to the idea of a regional team. The Toronto Series allows the Rogers
group to use the novelty and rarity of NFL football to charge super-premium
prices to Toronto fans. At the same time, the Wilson family gets a $78 million
payday from the Rogers group, and can also charge slightly more for games at
Rich Stadium because of decreased supply. Over a period of a few seasons, the
Wilsons and the Rogers conglomerate could tweak the 7-to-1 Buffalo-Toronto game
arrangement. The Bills could end up playing four games in each venue, just as
the Packers split time between Green Bay and Milwaukee in the 1970s and 80s.

Some fans may abandon the Bills if they become Canadians or vagabonds, but
Florida sees a big difference between a move within the TBR region and a move
to, say, Los Angeles. “Economic development, more than ever before, is about
talent attraction and retention. Creative types are concentrating in communities
that are open, diverse, and thick with an array of amenities. Major league
sports help to create an authentic community, one that is appealing and engaging
for people of all walks of life.” The designation “major league city” still
means something in the world of high finance. Toronto will use pro football to enhance its
international profile; the official Toronto Series website
(www.billsintoronto.com) touts the city as “international, sophisticated,
ethnically diverse, fascinating and passionate about sports.” That designation
could apply to the whole TBR region, which could in turn use the Bills as a
drawing card. “Authenticity is important to creative workers,” Florida said.
“Professional sports teams, similar to a region’s arts community and its unique
neighborhoods, help make a region unique.”

The Bills are one of the few things lending “authenticity” to Buffalo;
without them (and the Sabres), Buffalo has little to offer that can’t be found
in Elmira or Erie, Pennsylvania. “The Bills are our last lingering vestige of
being a major league city,” Robinson said. “People take a lot of pride in them.”
Re-imagine Buffalo as a small part of a thriving mega-region, and the fans of
western New York can keep their allegiance to the Bills.

Even with a border in the way, the mega-region remains a big, growing  “commutable” market.  In Bos-Wash, Philly and DC are becoming the new suburbs so to speak, for those who can’t afford or can’t deal with the hustle and bustle of NYC but want a more “urban” alternative.  Buffalo can benefit from Toronto’s market size and unrelenting growth. Already, Canadians are the no. 1 immigrant group in Buffalo. Who knows?  Eventually, as housing prices continue to rise in Toronto, Buffalo may well be able to capitalize on its huge housing cost advantage, combined with its lakefront, authentic neighborhoods, universities, healthcare system, and arts and cultural assets to begin to attract talent from the mega, and perhaps, the world.

And I’ll sure be lining up for my Tor-Buf-Chester Bill’s tickets.