Sunday, November 22, 2009

SPECIAL SECTION: SPOKANE CONVENTION CENTER

Convention Center opens economic doors


Darrell Johnson, at left, and Jim Richards of Centerplate prepare a platter of roasted garlic-stuffed cherry tomatoes on Tuesday for today's dedication of the Group Health Exhibit Hall at the Spokane Convention Center. (Christopher Anderson The Spokesman-Review )


See it Thursday

Public tours on Thursday run from 2 p.m. to 7 p.m. and will feature 12 staffed explanatory stations.

While politicians and dignitaries rub elbows today at the dedication of Spokane's $75 million Convention Center expansion, tourism officials will be hard at work using the building for its intended purpose – attracting additional visitor dollars to the city.

National meeting planners representing nine organizations that are considering holding conventions in Spokane are attending today's ceremonies. If all were to say yes to Spokane, the conventions would represent an additional infusion of more than $12 million in visitor dollars to the Spokane economy over the next six years.

"We can stop talking and let them soak it all in and believe it for themselves," said Keith Backsen, vice president of the Spokane Regional Convention and Visitors Bureau. "They get here and they can see it firsthand."

After years of planning and two years of construction, the Group Health Exhibit Hall will be celebrated today and Thursday with a building dedication, public tours and other events. Built along the Spokane River on the east end of downtown, the 100,000-square-foot exhibit hall is within walking distance of Riverfront Park, shops, restaurants and hotels. Its size nearly triples Spokane's exhibit hall space and positions the region to attract more national convention business.

ADVERTISEMENT
One of the meeting planners attending today's dedication represents an event that would bring an estimated $2.5 million to the city. He is trying to decide whether to hold his February 2007 event here or in Pittsburgh. His event would require 1,800 hotel rooms, spread from Airway Heights to Liberty Lake, said Backsen, who declined to name the event for competitive reasons.

Also attending grand opening events will be three writers for national trade magazines that focus on the convention industry. Exposure like that goes a long way toward overcoming Spokane's relative obscurity on the national convention scene, Backsen said.

"We've never gotten any of these writers here before," Backsen said. "That is right at the market I need us to get our name in front of."

This week's grand opening celebrations have been months in the making. State and local politicians will make speeches and unveil an official dedication plaque. Jazz bands will play as visitors stroll past 30-foot-high windows with views of the Spokane River. Visitors will learn about the building from about 50 volunteers staffing 12 explanatory stations during self-guided tours. The volunteers come from organizations including the CVB, the Spokane Public Facilities District, building sponsor Group Health and project architect Integrus Architecture.

Visitors will see, for the first time, a newly installed memorial to Spokane businessman Luke Williams, whose chairmanship of the Washington State Exhibit during Expo '74 was critical in delivering the original Spokane Convention Center and Opera House, now called the INB Performing Arts Center. That memorial is installed in the Ag Trade section of the Convention Center.



Search:
Advertisement

GU basketball

See our Gonzaga hoops page for photos, game results, stories and more. Also see:

SportsLinkFan forumZags mobile

Sponsored by:

WSU basketball

See our Cougar hoops page for photos, game results, stories and more. Also see:

SportsLinkCougs mobile

Holiday Gift Guide

Cold Case stories »

For three decades, Kathy Forech had nightmares that her daughter would disappear on her birthday and be found in the Spokane River. It's just a mother's fear, she thought. It was more of a premonition. »

Sponsored by:

High school sports

High school sports Get schedules and scores for football, volleyball, slowpitch softball, girls and boys soccer and cross country.

High school news

Check out the Vox Box, online companion to the high school newspaper, The Vox.

Download The Vox in PDF

Gas prices

Readers report local prices here.

Ongoing coverage

Kendall Yards
Otto Zehm death
Spokane Diocese bankruptcy
Met Mortgage bankruptcy
Duncan investigation
River Park Square development
River Park Square crash
Archived sections:
Jim West investigation
Morning Star investigation

Assisted living database

Search for information about local assisted living and skilled nursing facilities.

Local bloggers

See our list of Inland Northwest bloggers. If you live in the Inland Northwest and are a regular blogger, we might link to your blog.

 

Construction
Click here detail

Delivery Lab Supplies
Click here for details

Dispatch Trainee
Click here for details

Hair Stylists
Northern Quest Resort & Casino

Heavy Equipment
Click here for details

Manager, Professional Development
& Learning, U of Idaho

Manufacturing
Click here for details

Nail Technician
Northern Quest Resort & Casino

Telecomm Eng-Cyber Security
Grant County PUD

Warehouse
Click here for details

PROMOTIONS
   HOT DEALS | About
No Data Supplied
   No Data Supplied
SHINGLES & DECKING ON SALE!
   Savemore Building Supply
November Rent Free - each listing
   Baker & Associates
Whirlpool Washer/Dryer
   $150
ROCKCLIFFE APTS.
   Call 534-6926 NAI Black