https://www.espn.com/blog/miami-dolphins/post/_/id/32826/inside-the-miami-dolphins-135m-practice-facility-players-lounge-palm-trees-and-a-slide
This is almost identical to the Dolphins facility. They were able to buy out their materials during covid when everything was at a steep discount. The Jaguars are buying out steel and concrete at the absolute highest prices in history and are still coming in under the Dolphins' budget.
The Jags actually contracted the exact same designer - Rossetti out of Detroit, who does a lot of these facilities - and used a very similar site plan.
To be clear, the Fox News conspiracy isn't that Shad Khan is acting in a vacuum to bilk the Jax taxpayers into thinking they're paying half for developments, but actually paying more than half.
The Fox News conspiracy is that, on the surface, it appears that a lot of these new NFL developments popping up seem to have price tags significantly higher than non-NFL developments (e.g. Jags and Dolphins pump $120 to $130 million into sports performance centers; UF and FSU pump $75 to $85 million into facilities that don't appear on the surface to be 50% to 60% fancier/bigger/more outwardly expensive. And they all seem to use the same handful of speciality firms to design and price them.
Just a fun conspiracy, I could be totally wrong, that's why I'm asking about whether elements of the job are RFP'd, how costs are disclosed back to the city, or if we just take the Jags word that a $120 million facility costs $120 million, a $450 million mini-mail truly costs half a billion dollars, and a $1 billion stadium project truly costs $1 billion.
Weirdest moment of the entire Lot J ordeal was when the Jags and Cordish flat-out told the City Council that detailed project costs were proprietary and that they refused to share them with the public.
Keep in mind also that the $120,000,000 price tag came down before construction material cost exploded.
It's a good project, I'm all for the Jags staying here long-term, we haven't had to dole out nearly as much in public money as most other cities over the last 30 years, just genuinely curious where that $120 million is going specifically, and how those costs are shared with the city.