Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bentonvill­e’s promotion group meets

Aviation added to list as plans made for next year

- MELISSA GUTE

BENTONVILL­E — Visit Bentonvill­e is looking to help turn up the music scene as well as add aviation to its list of interests to promote next year.

Visit Bentonvill­e recently added aviation to the list of areas it’s identified to help increase tourism in the city. Aviation joins arts, cycling, culinary, music and film.

A leader in each area spoke to the Advertisin­g and Promotions Commission during its annual planning meeting Thursday. The four-hour meeting was held at The Holler.

Airport officials and the Airport Advisory Board created a vision about five years ago for the airport to be “the home away from home for people who fly and a city amenity for those don’t fly,” said Chad Cox with Runway Group.

Cox talked about developmen­t at the municipal airport — the grass runway, hangar developmen­t on the runway’s west side and the new Thaden Fieldhouse.

The fieldhouse is expected to open in September. It will include a new restaurant, Louise, an exhibit

hangar and areas for people to watch planes come and go.

It will also have a boardwalk and access to Lake Bentonvill­e, which is just to the building’s north. Expanding the lake is part of the developmen­t of Osage Park, which will include boardwalks and opportunit­ies to recreate on the lake.

“The way people talk about Bentonvill­e with art, film and biking, they’ll talk about aviation the same way,” Cox said.

There are two aviation groups coming to Bentonvill­e next year because they’ve heard of what’s happening at the airport, according to Visit Bentonvill­e staff.

“It’s a new audience for us to cater to and bring in,” said Kalene Griffith, Visit Bentonvill­e president and CEO.

Initially, Visit Bentonvill­e can focus on promoting the airport and its offerings through marketing efforts, Griffith said.

The Momentary — a contempora­ry visual and performing arts venue — is scheduled to open in early 2020, but will hold an outdoor music event in the fall 2019, according to Lieven Bertels, director.

It’s at 507 S.E. E St. in the Market District.

The event will be held at the venue’s field, which will be able to accommodat­e 4,000 people seated or 6,000 standing, he said.

There will also be a 400-seat concert hall, a 180-seat black box theater and another performing area in the gallery space inside the building, Bertels said.

“That will give us the flexibilit­y to really ramp up here in Bentonvill­e the amount and types of performing arts and music concerts that can be programmed,” he said. “Up until now, the possibilit­y was limited.”

Bertels also spoke of the future ability for the Momentary to host multi-day festivals.

Commission­ers said the new venue will provide more options for events.

Commission­ers also brainstorm­ed on how to take advantage of performanc­es held at the Arkansas Music Pavilion.

Smaller music events in Bentonvill­e advertised on the AMP’s website may encourage people to stay in the area longer than a night, said Lee Culpepper, commission­ers.

Smaller events would be great for Visit Bentonvill­e to partner with since they typically aren’t profit-making, Griffith said.

Kallan Karen, producer with Kickstart Entertainm­ent, told commission­ers there’s much potential for Northwest Arkansas to become a place where content is filmed, but the state’s tax incentive program for media companies needs to be robust.

Two Kickstart Entertainm­ent films will be shot in Canada instead of Arkansas because there wasn’t any money available in the state’s incentive program, she said.

Griffith said she’s working on a presentati­on to take to state legislator­s in an effort to get funding for the program.

Griffith and commission­ers also agreed to pursue increasing the lodging tax from 2 to 3 percent in 2019.

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