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A Public/Private Partnership Will Pay for a Major Quicken Loans Arena Transformation

The new look the Cavs foresee for Quicken Loans Arena
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS
The new look the Cavs foresee for Quicken Loans Arena

Quicken Loans Arena is slated for a major $140 million renovation that will extend the life of the 23-year-old downtown Cleveland sports and entertainment complex.

The city of Cleveland, Cuyahoga County and the region’s visitors and convention bureau, Destination Cleveland, will pay for half of the project. The other half will come from the Cleveland Cavaliers and the organization that runs the arena.  County Executive Armond Budish says the public funding portion will not impact other services.

“And with some creativity we figured it out. And we figured it out without raising taxes. Most of the funds will come from revenue streams that already exist and are generated or directly impacted by the Q.”

Those include admission taxes and hotel-bed taxes.  The structural, amenity and appearance improvements to the arena are expected to increase the Q's competitiveness and make it usable until the year 2034. That’s about 20 years longer than the life span of most arenas. This year the facility generated nearly $2.5 billion in direct spending.  

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Kevin Niedermier
Kevin was raised in New Washington in rural North Central Ohio. He attended Bowling Green State University and Ashland College (now Ashland University) before beginning his career in commercial radio news.