TAMPA — When it comes to finding the ideal place to build a 175,000-square-foot indoor sports complex in Hillsborough County, county planners were tasked with delivering options. One, in the West Shore area, was more like a half-court shot attempt. A second option, near the Tournament Sportsplex of Tampa Bay, was more like a full-court shot. But the Museum of Science and Industry site? A slam dunk. Hillsborough’s Board of County Commissioners agreed, voting unanimously to direct county staff to focus efforts on placing the indoor sports arena on the MOSI property on East Fowler Avenue. Putting an indoor sports facility on the 74-acre MOSI site, where a firm has already been selected to develop a center for science, technology and innovation while bringing in multifamily housing, retail space and a hotel, would require incorporating the indoor sports complex into the site master plan. Commissioner Ken Hagan called it a transformative opportunity. “By building the indoor facility on the MOSI property … this will be the catalyst for the most transformative economic development project Hillsborough County has ever been associated with,” he said. “It’s estimated to be a $2 billion project. And additionally, I know staff believes an indoor facility will help to accelerate the development and make it even more attractive.” Several factors made the MOSI site the clear choice, according to county staff. First, the county already owns the land, cutting acquisition costs and legal hurdles. Second, planners could repurpose some existing MOSI buildings on the campus’s west side, trimming costs and timelines. Third, the site is centrally located, with easy access to major roads, including interstates 275 and 75 and public transit options. While the county was looking for 15 acres to house the facility, by integrating it into the broader MOSI redevelopment, it could incorporate shared parking, meaning the county would only need 6 acres for the facility. Plus, the added bonus of giving the revitalization of the Uptown corridor a boost is attractive. MOSI, after languishing for years, recently opened the country’s second-largest planetarium and is viewed as an integral piece to growth in the Uptown district, which will soon include a new University of South Florida football stadium .
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