Broward County Convention Center Explained

Broward County Convention Center
Address:1950 Eisenhower Blvd
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33316
Location:Port Everglades
Construction Cost:$48.9 million (1991)
$1.3 billion (2025 estimated)
Total Space:600000square feet (original)
1000000square feet (renovated)
Exhibit:200000square feet (original)

The Broward County Convention Center or Greater Fort Lauderdale/Broward County Convention Center (sometimes Fort Lauderdale Convention Center) is a convention center located in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, with an adjecent Omni Hotels & Resorts facility. It is located adjacent to the Intracoastal Waterway.

The long-term calendar management for the Convention Center has been the responsibility of The Greater Fort Lauderdale Convention & Visitors Bureau.

History

In January 1985, thirteen sites were considered for a proposed Broward County Convention Center. One of the leading sites was a 25acres parcel that included a 15acres trailer park near Fort Lauderdale–Hollywood International Airport at U.S. 1 and Northwest 10th Street.[1] [2] By February, the Fort Lauderdale Commission had shortened the list to six official candidates, but the Broward County Tourist Development Council's top choice was a 9.3acres Port Everglades-owned parcel on Southeast 17th Street near the beach, hotels and other local tourist attractions.[3] In April 1985, Touche Ross filed a preliminary report that stated that Broward County's "resort atmosphere, climate and cost of travel" were favorable toward a dedicated Convention Center, but that its low first-class hotel room count would be a limiting factor to the meetings it could attract.[4] Thus, when Touche Ross submitted an evaluation of 16 potential sites in June 1985, no locations were highly-rated, but the trailer park site was the best alternative.[5] [6] By 1986, development plans included coordinating accommodations to bring major league baseball, basketball and hockey franchises to South Florida.[7] [8] An request for proposal deadline of November 5, 1986 was set.[9] Only 2 of the 5 candidates received support from any of the 20 civic association presidents in January 1987.[10] The final contenders were a site on the beach at East Las Olas Boulevard and Birch Road as well as one at Port Everglades, but homeowners expressed opposition to the former site.[11] The vote to determine the winning plan was set for March 10, 1987 with the Northport plan to develop the port land off the Southeast 17th Street Causeway and Eisenhower Boulevard with a $45 million ($ million in), 150,000-square-foot convention center plus a $90 million ($ million in) commercial marketplace the leading contender.[12]

The Broward County Convention Center topped out in July 1990.[13] On Thursday September 5, 1991, the facility had its ribbon cutting ceremony to celebrate the $48.9 ($ million in) development. The center was completed months (4 or 11, depending on the source) ahead of schedule and $750,000 ($ million in) under budget.[14] At the time, a forthcoming on-site hotel was anticipated. Before it opened, The Broward County Convention Center had over 200 events booked.[15] Its grand opening festivities lasted four days, including a Saturday and Sunday public open house.[16] Broward County Convention Center's first scheduled convention was the September 25 - 28 Florida Roofing, Sheet Metal and Air Conditioning Contractors Association assembly of its 3,500 members.[17] It also hosted a Fall Home Show two weekends earlier.[18]

Based on the 2013 USA Today rankings for top convention destinations, Ft. Lauderdale ranked 36th (right behind St. Louis) after having lost its largest annual convention in 2012 due to factors that included "lack of meeting space" and the absence of an adjoining hotel after 20 years of hosting the event. In fact, the convention center deficiencies were estimated to cause Broward County to lose $400 million ($ million in) in business and 960,000 hotel room nights between 2008 and 2016.[19] At the time, the Broward County Convention Center had 600000square feet, including a 200000square feet exhibit floor.[20] On August 25, 2015, the Broward County Commissioners narrowed the list of potential developers for the renovation of the Convention Center to 5 firms based on financial capacity and capability.[21] [22] Plans for the renovation were announced in April 2017.[23]

Controversially, the Broward County Commissioners decided in 2022 to use $140 million ($ million in) funds from the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 for the hotel portion of the convention center despite the fact that the hotel construction was unrelated to public health. The loose objectives of the COVID-19 relief stimulus included helping local governments to "recover from financial distress" and "achieve their own strategies for restoring jobs," according to a United States Treasury spokesperson.[24] [25] The renovation includes roadwork for a bypass road to serve as an alternate to Southeast 17th Street between the Fort Lauderdale beach and U.S. Route 1.

The groundbreaking for the renovation occurred in May 2019.[26] The expansion to a 350000square feet exhibition floor and addition of an adjacent hotel was initially expected to be completed by 2021, but was two-years behind schedule by 2018 with the construction phase expected to run from 2020 to 2023.[27] Construction was further delayed during the pandemic.[26] The final phase of the renovation had begun by May 2, 2022 with completion expected by the end of 2025 at a total cost of $1.3 billion.[28] On December 13, 2023, the renovation topped out (officially placed the uppermost steel beam) for the expansion building and adjacent 800-room 29-story Omni Fort Lauderdale Hotel.[29]

See also

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: LEASE FOR CONVENTION CENTER SITE OFFERED SOUTH OF AIRPORT: [SUN-SENTINEL Edition]]. subscription. . Sun-Sentinel. Hill-Morgan, Valerie. 1.B. May 28, 2024. January 24, 1985.
  2. Web site: TRAILER OWNERS FIGHT CENTER PLAN: [NEWS/SUN-SENTINEL Edition]]. subscription. . Sun-Sentinel. Hill-Morgan, Valerie. 1.B. May 28, 2024. January 26, 1985.
  3. Web site: LAUDERDALE SUPPORTS SITE FOR NEW CONVENTION CENTER: [SUN-SENTINEL Edition]]. subscription. . Sun-Sentinel. Rojas, Helen. 4.B. May 28, 2024. February 6, 1985.
  4. Web site: REPORT: BREAK, CONVENTIONS IN CONFLICT: [SUN-SENTINEL Edition]]. subscription. . Sun-Sentinel. Zamost, Scott A.. 5.B. May 28, 2024. April 23, 1985.
  5. Web site: FIRST CONVENTION SITE RANKINGS FALL SHORT: [SUN-SENTINEL Edition]]. subscription. . Sun-Sentinel. Zamost, Scott A.. 1.B. May 28, 2024. June 14, 1985.
  6. Web site: SITE NEAR AIRPORT RANKED BEST FOR A CONVENTION CENTER: [NEWS/SUN-SENTINEL Edition]]. subscription. . Sun-Sentinel. Zamost, Scott A.. 5.B. May 28, 2024. June 22, 1985.
  7. Web site: CENTER SITES LISTED CONVENTION COMPLEX GETS GOOD RESPONSE: [SUN-SENTINEL Edition]]. subscription. . Sun-Sentinel. Gibson, David. 1B. May 28, 2024. October 22, 1986.
  8. Web site: COUNTY STUDIES CONVENTION CENTER DEAL: [SUN-SENTINEL Edition]]. subscription. . Sun-Sentinel. Pierce, Rick. 3B. May 28, 2024. March 28, 1986.
  9. Web site: SUNRISE COMPLEX DEBATED: [SUN-SENTINEL Edition]]. subscription. . Sun-Sentinel. 3B. May 28, 2024. October 30, 1986.
  10. Web site: GROUP ENDORSES CONVENTION SITES: [SUN-SENTINEL Edition]]. subscription. . Sun-Sentinel. 4B. May 28, 2024. January 14, 1987.
  11. Web site: HOMEOWNERS FIGHT BEACH CONVENTION CENTER: [NEWS/SUN-SENTINEL Edition]]. subscription. . Sun-Sentinel. Kelly, Leon. 3. May 28, 2024. January 18, 1987.
  12. Web site: PORT OFFICIALS OK LEASE FOR PROPOSED CONVENTION CENTER: [SUN-SENTINEL Edition]]. subscription. . Sun-Sentinel. Elich, Patricia. 4B. May 28, 2024. February 20, 1987.
  13. Web site: MARCHERS ORDERED OFF CEREMONY SITE: [SUN-SENTINEL Edition]]. subscription. . Sun-Sentinel. Clark, Chuck. 7B. May 28, 2024. July 13, 1990.
  14. Web site: IT'S SMOOTH SAILING AT CONVENTION CENTER GALA: [SUN-SENTINEL Edition]]. subscription. . Sun-Sentinel. Gross, Martha. 1D. May 28, 2024. September 9, 1991.
  15. Web site: SHOWS LARGE AND SMALL ALREADY BOOKED FOR CENTER THROUGH YEAR 2000.: [SUN-SENTINEL Edition]]. subscription. . Sun-Sentinel. Fleischer, Joan. 9. May 28, 2024. August 19, 1991.
  16. Web site: NEW CENTER DOES SOME BRAGGING FESTIVITIES SHOW OFF $48.9 MILLION PROJECT: [SUN-SENTINEL Edition]]. subscription. . Sun-Sentinel. LaMendola, Bob. 1B. May 28, 2024. September 6, 1991.
  17. Web site: CONVENTION CENTER NEEDS A HOTEL, BUT STILL HAS MUCH TO OFFER COUNTY: [SUN-SENTINEL Edition]]. subscription. . Sun-Sentinel. 6A. May 28, 2024. September 4, 1991.
  18. Web site: GETTING RAVE REVIEWS BROWARD'S NEW CONVENTION CENTER WOWS THEM AT FALL HOME SHOW.: [SUN-SENTINEL Edition]]. subscription. . Sun-Sentinel. Forman, Ellen. 11C. May 28, 2024. September 14, 1991.
  19. Web site: $50M Ballroom, Facilities Expansion Planned for America's Center. May 27, 2024. February 7, 2014. Whittington, Geoff. NextStL.
  20. Web site: A few questions for ... Mark Gatley Regional General Manager of the Greater Fort Lauderdale/Broward County Convention Center. subscription. . South Florida Sun-Sentinel. A.11. May 27, 2024. January 22, 2014.
  21. Web site: Five developers considered for Broward convention center expansion. https://web.archive.org/web/20170301190607/https://www.sun-sentinel.com/business/tourism/fl-broward-convention-center-hotel-update-20150825-story.html. May 27, 2024. August 25, 2015. March 1, 2017. Satchell, Arlene. Sun Sentinel.
  22. Web site: Five developers bidding for convention center job. May 27, 2024. September 12, 2015. The Real Deal.
  23. Web site: Plans Unveiled for Fort Lauderdale's Convention Center Expansion. May 28, 2024. April 7, 2017. Successfulmeetings.com. Jakobson, Leo.
  24. Web site: Broward uses $140M in COVID funds to build hotel. May 27, 2024. March 24, 2022. Putney, Michael. WPLG.
  25. Web site: Pandemic relief money spent on hotel, ballpark, ski slopes. June 10, 2024. March 23, 2022. Slodysko, Brian. WPLG.
  26. Web site: Convention Center Construction in Broward Stalls During COVID Pandemic. May 27, 2024. June 3, 2021. Sanchez, Kristin. WTVJ.
  27. Web site: Broward delays timing of convention center expansion and adjacent hotel project. May 27, 2024. September 29, 2018. The Real Deal.
  28. Web site: Final Phase of the Greater Fort Lauderdale/ Broward County Convention Center Expansion Project Starts. June 10, 2024. May 2, 2022. Hotel News.
  29. Web site: Florida Omni, convention center expansion top out. May 27, 2024. December 13, 2023. Glatt, Jennifer. Hotel Management.