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Originally Posted On: https://www.springfieldmo.org/blog/post/the-long-term-vision-building-a-stronger-springfield-together/
There’s a conversation happening in Springfield right now — in coffee shops, church halls, neighborhood association meetings, and family dinner tables. It’s a conversation about what kind of city Springfield wants to be. Not next year. Not in five years. But over the next generation, and the one after that.
The proposed Convention and Events Center is part of that conversation. It’s a statement about the kind of Springfield we want to build — one that is economically vibrant, competitive with its peer cities, and worthy of the 3 million visitors who already choose to come here every year. Getting this right matters. And the opportunity to do so is here, right now.
A Vision Shaped by Community Input
This project didn’t emerge from a city hall boardroom without community involvement. After a previous ballot measure on a similar topic was defeated, the city paused, listened, and changed course based on what residents said. Public listening sessions and a community survey surfaced two clear themes: people wanted more transparency and safeguards, and they wanted assurance that core services wouldn’t be neglected in pursuit of growth.
The revised proposal addresses both concerns and adds a 35-year sunset, ensuring the tax automatically expires after a defined period.
This is a community-shaped proposal — one that reflects what Springfield residents asked for when they said they wanted transparency, safeguards, and a plan that does both: takes care of today and builds for tomorrow.
Springfield Is Already a Destination — It Just Needs the Facility to Match
Here’s a fact that surprises many Springfield residents: approximately 3 million people visit this city every year. Three million. They fill hotel rooms, eat in local restaurants, shop at local businesses, and explore everything Springfield has built over the decades. They come for sporting events, family gatherings, medical appointments, business meetings, and yes — conventions and events at the Expo Center.
That’s not a city that ‘nobody visits.’ That’s a legitimate regional destination. The challenge isn’t attracting visitors — Springfield is already doing that. The challenge is scaling up to capture the larger, higher-spending events that are currently going to cities with more capable facilities. A modern Convention and Events Center is the infrastructure that bridges that gap.
What the Future Looks Like with This Investment
The economic projections for the proposed facility paint a vivid picture of what Springfield’s tourism economy could look like with the right infrastructure in place. Annually, the new Convention and Events Center is projected to:
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Host 164 events, drawing approximately 179,500 attendees
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Generate roughly 80,000 hotel room nights
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Produce approximately $45 million in new visitor spending
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Support around 216 ongoing full-time equivalent jobs
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Generate approximately $2.5 million in annual city tax revenue — roughly $6,800 every single day
That last figure deserves emphasis. $6,800 per day, every day, flowing into the city tax base that funds police, fire, streets, parks, and public facilities. Not from residents — from visitors investing in Springfield by virtue of choosing to come here. This is how cities fund their futures without burdening their residents.
Tourism Is One of Springfield’s Most Important Economic Engines
It’s easy to overlook tourism as a ‘soft’ economic sector compared to manufacturing or healthcare. But the hospitality and tourism industry in the Springfield area supports more than 18,000 jobs. These are people who work as hotel managers, event coordinators, chefs, servers, housekeeping staff, groundskeepers, security personnel, and dozens of other roles that keep Springfield’s visitor economy running.
A new Convention and Events Center doesn’t just protect those jobs — it expands them. The facility itself will require ongoing staff to manage events, maintain the building, handle catering and logistics, and coordinate with clients. Those 216 full-time equivalent jobs represent real careers in Springfield, held by Springfield residents, generating local spending power that recirculates through the community.
A Springfield That Believes in Itself
There’s a particular kind of humility that can hold a city back — a sense that big things happen elsewhere, that world-class facilities are for other places, that Springfield is a great city but maybe not that kind of great. That sentiment, while born of genuine local character, undersells what Springfield has already built and what it’s capable of becoming.
Three million visitors a year don’t come to a city that doesn’t deserve their time. National conventions don’t get lost on their way to boring cities. The Assemblies of God is headquartered here. Missouri State University brings students from across the country. Bass Pro Shops started here and transformed an entire industry. Springfield has depth, character, and draws that most cities would envy.
What it hasn’t had — until now — is the infrastructure to fully capitalize on that foundation. A modern Convention and Events Center is how Springfield closes the gap between the city it is and the city it’s becoming.
The Window Is Now
One final thing worth noting: this moment is not indefinitely available. The state funding opportunity — a potential $30 million appropriation — is contingent on Springfield demonstrating local commitment. That window will close. The Spring Forward SGF funds are allocated for this purpose now. The financial structure has been carefully assembled to make this work without burdening residents. All the pieces are in place.
April 7, 2026 is when Springfield residents have the opportunity to shape this city’s trajectory. Not with a tax on themselves — but with a decision to put visitor investment to work for the community they call home.
The long-term vision for Springfield is one of growth, opportunity, and community pride. The Convention and Events Center is a cornerstone of that vision. Let’s build it together.

























