GoBobs wrote:Stadium are a relic from a time before tv cameras. The nba doesn't need them anymore. They just keep building them the same way because they are stealing public money.
Most of the money generated is from the courtside seats and the area right around the lower bowl. If an arena has maybe 18,000 seats, most of the revenue is generated by the best 4000 seats.
The upper bowl is the most expensive to build (by far) and generates the least revenue per seat by far. These seats also give a worse view than watching on tv.
If you are watching a game on tv, it doesn't matter if the crowd is 5,000 people or 20,000.
If these owners were spending thier own money to build the areans maybe that would think about costs of building differently.
A 5,000 seat arena, where every one of those seats is a great one, and offers the kind of fan experience that someone paying that money expects is what the NBA needs.
Seating should be spacious. Bathrooms should be plentiful. Food should be quaility and reasonably priced. Treat the customer good and the ticket prices will reflect the value of the experience.
This is an excellent point, one that may go over a ton of peoples heads, especially the younger crowd.
A perfect example of this, is the modern movie theater. Emagine theaters are absolutely fantastic. Spacious, heated/Cooled seats, leather recliners, 5 feet of room in front of you, food brought to you during the movie. Back in the day, a completely different experience was to be had.
Horrendous seating, no arm rests, jammed together like an airliner, basic soda/popcorn or 100 year old snow caps that you could shingle a roof with, bathrooms that were a war crime by modern standards, and the theaters, were absolutely filthy.
The whole arena concept needs to be re-imagined from the ground up.