A Peek at the Future Downtown San Diego Without a New Charger Stadium

With two November ballot initiatives proposing to rezone a large part of downtown San Diego for a combined NFL stadium and convention facility, the community and a team of architects worked furiously to complete a more urban vision for the site.

3 minute read

August 11, 2016, 11:00 AM PDT

By wadams92101


Nightime view of San Diego skyline

kellinahandbasket / Flickr

After spurning San Diego's stadium redevelopment efforts for the glitter of Los Angeles, only to be rejected in favor of Stan Kroenke's Inglewood uber-opulent stadium project, Chargers' owner Dean Spanos came back to San Diego—not with relationship repair humility but with an audacious and shameless demand: Build him a stadium on the city's most valuable public land downtown and spend $1 billion in tax dollars (plus the cost of ancillary infrastructure upgrades), via a hotel tax hike, to do it. It was the type of petulant demand for which NFL owners have become infamous, and to which cities too often capitulate due to the extreme popularity of pro football, whose advocates seem to equate support of the home team to patriotism.

However, San Diegans had only recently experienced the hardship and uncertainty of poor municipal financial decisions of the not so distant past, which included among other things, a yet not paid-off stadium expansion and a widely derided Charger ticket guarantee, followed of course, by Spanos's attempted abandonment of the city. Rather than negotiate with city officials, who are almost uniformly opposed to the proposal, Spanos decided to bypass the guardians of the city's purse via a ballot initiative banking on home team populism. Moreover, to give the stadium the appearance of a "multi-purpose" facility, the ballot initiative proposes to combine it with a new convention annex, which is uniformly opposed by the convention industry (who prefer a contiguous expansion of the existing facility to accommodate large conventions and avoid scheduling conflicts with sports events). Even the city's popular annual Comic-Con went on record declaring such a facility to be a misstep. Thus it threatens to be two boondoggles in one. The proposed project has become known as the "Convadium."  

But even before Spanos's measure, another billionaire ballot measure sought to rezone the site for sports and entertainment in an apparent effort to facilitate a new Charger stadium and convention annex. This measure was pushed by downtown hotel developer JMI (John Moores' development coompany), who apparently desired his own tax-funded convention facility, and oddly aided by notorious statewide litigator of municipal endeavors, attorney Corey Briggs. Emboldened by the Briggs/JMI measure, Spanos decided to up the ante. 

In this environment, an alternative and more urban vision has arisen. Do you want to see what the proposed stadium site might look like in the future without a "Convadium"? Check out the recently released East Village South Draft Focus Plan: Web link (faster loading but loses some formatting) or PDF link (slower downloading but original document). Packed with great illustrations, it's not a dry read. It is the culmination of community workshops held earlier in the year and the efforts of some of the city's most prominent architects. The effort was sponsored by the American Institute of Architects - San Diego and Citizens for Century III (C-3). Unlike the Spanos plan, development won't tap $1 billion plus in public funds and property, but is designed to generate public funds, high paying jobs, and economic activity. It also won't result in the large-scale displacement of homeless from the East Village nor have the negative traffic, noise, automobile pollution, and view blockage on the adjacent neighborhoods. Contrary to the claims of stadium proponents, the Focus Plan will happen—is happening—faster than a Convadium. Unlike a mega-public project requiring rezoning, land assemblage, eminent domain, demolition of historic resources, large-scale environmental clean-up, removal of the MTS bus yards, spanning earthquake faults, bond issuance, and possibly years of litigation, the East Village Focus Plan is already happening, will near completion and create benefits much sooner than a Convadium. The projects are privately funded, except for affordable housing funds, and is happening on a lot by lot, block by block basis, not having to wait for all hurdles to be cleared before construction can commence. 

Saturday, July 30, 2016 in UrbDeZine

portrait of professional woman

I love the variety of courses, many practical, and all richly illustrated. They have inspired many ideas that I've applied in practice, and in my own teaching. Mary G., Urban Planner

I love the variety of courses, many practical, and all richly illustrated. They have inspired many ideas that I've applied in practice, and in my own teaching.

Mary G., Urban Planner

Get top-rated, practical training

Concrete Brutalism building with slanted walls and light visible through an atrium.

What ‘The Brutalist’ Teaches Us About Modern Cities

How architecture and urban landscapes reflect the trauma and dysfunction of the post-war experience.

February 28, 2025 - Justin Hollander

Complete Street

‘Complete Streets’ Webpage Deleted in Federal Purge

Basic resources and information on building bike lanes and sidewalks, formerly housed on the government’s Complete Streets website, are now gone.

February 27, 2025 - Streetsblog USA

Green electric Volkswagen van against a beach backdrop.

The VW Bus is Back — Now as an Electric Minivan

Volkswagen’s ID. Buzz reimagines its iconic Bus as a fully electric minivan, blending retro design with modern technology, a 231-mile range, and practical versatility to offer a stylish yet functional EV for the future.

March 3, 2025 - ABC 7 Eyewitness News

Screenshot of robot with fox and bird in The Wild Robot animated movie.

A Lone Voice for Climate: How The Wild Robot Stands Apart in Hollywood

Among this year’s Oscar-nominated films, only The Wild Robot passed the Climate Reality Check, a test measuring climate change representation in storytelling, highlighting the ongoing lack of climate awareness in mainstream Hollywood films.

1 minute ago - The Hollywood Reporter

View of mountains with large shrubs in foreground in Altadena, California.

Healing Through Parks: Altadena’s Path to Recovery After the Eaton Fire

In the wake of the Eaton Fire, Altadena is uniting to restore Loma Alta Park, creating a renewed space for recreation, community gathering, and resilience.

March 9 - Pasadena NOw

Aerial view of single-family homes with swimming pools in San Diego, California.

San Diego to Rescind Multi-Unit ADU Rule

The city wants to close a loophole that allowed developers to build apartment buildings on single-family lots as ADUs.

March 9 - Axios