
Officials say the error went unnoticed and every development team submitted plans perfectly aligned with the revised vision.
City officials acknowledged Thursday that a clerical error transformed the Historic Gas Plant District into the Historic Gaslight District in a recently issued redevelopment solicitation, prompting developers to submit proposals centered on emotional manipulation, selective memory and premium reality distortion.
The typo reportedly survived six legal reviews, three public workshops and more than 1,000 pages of submissions before anyone noticed.
By then, officials said, "the vision had evolved."
Among the proposals was a Center for Advanced Narrative Alignment, where trained professionals help visitors understand that the city never promised free parking, affordable housing or shorter City Council meetings.
The centerpiece attraction would be the Revision Museum, featuring rotating exhibits that reinterpret major moments in local history every 90 days.
One gallery, The Rays Experience, invites visitors to explore the fascinating story of a Major League Baseball team that definitely left, definitely stayed or may never have existed, depending on which room they enter.
Interactive displays encourage guests to confidently explain what happened to others despite possessing entirely different timelines.
"We've moved well beyond traditional gaslighting," one urban planning consultant said during a public workshop. "This is integrated perception infrastructure."
Perhaps the most ambitious proposal came from a consortium promising to create America's first fully immersive Reality Innovation District.
Amenities would include:
The consortium also proposed replacing the district's wayfinding signs with directional markers reading "You're Almost There," regardless of where visitors are standing.
Developers said the district would feature a state-of-the-art ballpark site commemorating decades of productive conversations about baseball.
The stadium itself would not be included.
Instead, visitors could stand on a designated overlook and imagine whichever financing plan they remembered most fondly.
During public comment, several residents questioned whether the city intended to issue an addendum correcting the typo.
Officials assured them no correction was necessary.
"People seem very focused on what the district used to be called," one administrator said. "We're encouraging everyone to move forward."
Following publication of this article, city officials confirmed there was never a Historic Gas Plant District. Readers who believe otherwise are encouraged to review the official records.
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