We have just learned that what is now Hilltop Mall will be  the new home of the Oakland Raiders. 
            It’s been no secret that Hilltop Mall has been on the  auction block (Hilltop  Mall Officially on the Market, March 17, 2016). We just weren’t expecting  it to go so soon, but apparently, it’s been in the works for some time.  
            It turns out that it was simply a matter of the stars being  aligned. Hilltop Mall is an obsolete business model that no longer works  commercially, but it has a sea of parking and good access to transportation,  both of which are critical to a sports stadium. And the price was right. 
            The new Raiders stadium at Hilltop, scheduled for completion  in early 2019, will combine mixed uses, including housing, offices and retail  in high rise towers, and will be a much more compact design than what is there  now. The surface parking will be consolidated into four multi-story parking  structures that will also serve housing and offices, since games are typically  on nights and weekends. “In fact, said Planning Director Richard Mitchel, “it  will be a self-contained city, largely self-sufficient, but providing enhanced  mobility to connect to to the region.” 
              
              Artist’s rendition of the  new raider’s stadium at Hilltop 
            For years, the Raiders have cultivated and burnished an  outlaw image that seemed to reflect Oakland, but Oakland is changing. With tech  companies like Uber moving in, a hot new restaurant scene and the fastest  rising rents in America, Oakland is looking more like silicon Valley and San  Francisco than home to swashbuckling and bloodthirsty pirates of the Caribbean.  It was time for the Black Hole to find a new home. 
            Richmond, however, still fits the bill. 
            “With its reputation as a rough and ready refinery town,”  said raiders owner Mark Davis, “Richmond is now the appropriate home of Raider  Nation. In fact,” continued Davis, “ Richmond is, in many ways, the new  Oakland.” 
            “Of course, the team will henceforth be known as the  Richmond Raiders,” added Davis. “Alliteration is always a good thing.” 
            There were a lot of factors that drove the decision.  
            “Libby Schaff thinks she is a tough and savvy negotiator,”  scoffed Davis, “but she pushed too hard this time. She had us over a barrel and  more than tripled our rent. She better not spend it all at once, because she  won’t see any more of it.” 
            The Hilltop location has many advantages. Like the current  Raiders stadium, it is located right next to I-80, but unlike Oakland, it also  has access to markets east and west. All of the North Bay is just across the  Richmond-San Rafael bridge and a short jaunt up the Richmond Parkway. Just a  few miles north on I-80, Highway 4 connects to Contra Costa County and the  Delta. 
            They even considered the future Richmond ferry terminal. “We  are looking at a fleet of DUKW’s, offered Davis, “ to shuttle fans from the  ferry terminal at the Craneway to Hilltop. They can come ashore down by  Parchester Village and drive right up the Richmond Parkway and right into the  stadium.” 
              
              A DUKW in Boston Harbor 
            BART Director Zachery Mallet is planning a BART extension  from the Richmond station north to Hilltop and ultimately to Hercules. “This is  great news, said Mallet when he heard about the Raider’s move, “It will  definitely accelerate completion of the project by several years.” 
            It’s also a short shuttle ride from the Richmond station for  Capitol Corridor riders, opening up access to the Central Valley. 
            The final deal appears to have been largely the work of  legendary real estate broker John Troughton, who works for Kennedy-Wilson, the  owner of Bella Vista at Hilltop, Richmond’s largest (1,000 units) apartment  complex. “Kennedy Wilson already has a  lot of knowledge of the Hilltop  Area as well as a successful investment there, “said Troughton. “We have also  been promised a piece of the housing portion of the stadium package.” 
            “Richmond will not commit any taxpayer money to the  stadium,” said City Manager Bill Lindsay, “but we will support it in many ways  as a public-private partnership. The City can provide access to low interest  revenue and industrial develop  bonds, and we can create an Enhanced  Infrastructure Financing District. Tax credits are available for some of the  housing components.” 
              
              The Black Hole 
            Reaction on the City Council was mixed but generally  supportive. 
            “Progressives, by nature, are not professional sports fans,”  said RPA spokesperson Marilyn Langlois, speaking for the three City Council RPA  members. “We view professional sports as elitist indulgences that the masses  can no longer afford, and we are more into social change. However, we have been  able to negotiate a deal with the Raiders to provide maintenance, food and  beverage jobs to unemployed Richmond residents at living wages, and they will  be trained by Richmond Employment and Training Department. Many of them will  also be offered affordable homes in the residential units built as a part of  the mixed use stadium project. Perhaps the best part is that they will be able  to walk to work. That’s a triple bottom line for us.” 
            Nat Bates was clearly the most enthusiastic. As an  outstanding athlete himself who once played pro-baseball, Nat is probably  Richmond’s biggest sports fan. “This is the biggest thing to hit Richmond since  Chevron came over a hundred years ago. It changes everything.” 
            Jael Myrick also cut a deal with the Raiders, enticing them  into augmenting the Richmond Promise Scholarship. “We will get $1,000 each time  the Raiders score a home game touchdown,” said Myrick. “Everyone in Richmond  will be cheering for them.” 
            Vinay Pimple took a keen interest in the legal aspects,  confiding that when he first got out of law school, he contemplated a career in  sports law. “I’ve looked at this deal from every angle, and it’s a great thing  for the City of Richmond.” 
            A press conference has been scheduled at Richmond City Hall  tomorrow to share details with the public. 
            As for me, I wish you a Happy April Fool’s Day!  |