A new report published by the City of Dallas last week estimated the costs to restore City Hall at somewhere in the range of $1 billion.

That includes an estimated $329 million for “corrective repairs” to the building’s aging infrastructure, around $300 million for financing, another $165 million for finishing touches and $113 million to temporarily locate city employees and services for about five years while all those repairs are being done.

Added up, the report claimed that those updates, which would simply modernize the building, would cost at least $906 million. The added effort of making the building further occupiable for the next 20 years, the report said, would push the overall renovation costs to around $1.14 billion.

Before your eyes glaze over at the thought of the astronomical price tag of a municipal improvement project, let that number sink in: $1.14 billion.

That would get you a brand new retractable-roof ballpark not too long ago! Just ask the Texas Rangers, who built Globe Life Field for $1.2 billion in 2020.

Listen, we get it: Inflation is hitting everywhere. So it’s not quite apples to apples. But the $1.14 billion figure — for a renovation, no less — was enough to grab our attention Friday evening when the city report dropped.

And it got us wondering how that number compares to other notable projects around North Texas, plus two that are very far from North Texas, but one of which bears a distinct connection to City Hall:

AT&T Stadium

Jerry World cost around $1.15 billion to build in 2009 when it opened as the most immaculate modern stadium at the time. In many respects, it still holds up, too. In today’s dollars, Jerry World was built for around $1.7 billion, according to the U.S. Inflation Calculator. So, still a bit more expensive than the proposed City Hall renovations. But it’s in the billion ballpark, if half-a-billion or so can be considered in the same ballpark. Perhaps a more apt comparison would be the recent AT&T Stadium renovations? Those cost around $300 million as the stadium gets ready for the World Cup.

Globe Life Field

Yes, inflation has really ramped up over the last six years, but this isn’t too far-fetched from the City Hall estimates. The Rangers’ ballpark, which cost a reported $1.2 billion upon its 2020 completion, would cost around $1.5 billion in today’s dollars when adjusted for inflation. (World Series title not included.)

American Airlines Center

The Mavericks’ and Stars’ $420 million home, which opened in 2001, would cost around $771 million in today’s dollars — well below the proposed cost of a City Hall renovation. The future of City Hall, of course, is intertwined in the backdrop of the Mavericks potentially building their next arena on the City Hall site.

“The Horseshoe” rebuild of the Dallas Mixmaster

Highway construction is seemingly where money goes to disappear, but even a complete rebuild of the Interstate 30 and Interstate 35E mixmaster at Downtown Dallas was just under the City Hall estimates, at least in today’s dollars. The $818 million project would cost about $1.108 billion in 2026.

The Dallas Cowboys

OK, so, this isn’t the best comparison for two reasons: $140 million — the cost Jerry paid to buy the Cowboys in 1989 — is still only $367 million in today’s dollars — a fraction of the proposed City Hall costs. Also, the Cowboys’ value today would be well over $10 billion, according to the latest estimates (good investment, Jerry). But it’s still somewhat crazy to think that little $0.14 billion part of the $1.14 billion is the same as what the Cowboys last sold for.

Klyde Warren Park

Merely one Klyde Warren Park — the deck park over Woodall Rodgers Freeway that revolutionized Dallas by connecting Uptown with Downtown — is not the appropriate comparison here. Instead, $1.14 billion could have purchased you around 10 Klyde Warren Parks, at $110 million apiece.

AT&T’s new headquarters

AT&T is moving its headquarters from Downtown Dallas to Plano, and part of the agreement with the city means the telecom giant must spend at least $1.35 billion on its new campus at 5400 Legacy Drive.

The Louvre

Put this one in The Louvre: The iconic Paris art museum’s proposed renovation cost last year was in the range of $800 million — or $300 million less than Dallas’ City Hall estimates. The notable connection? Famed architect I.M. Pei designed both the Louvre pyramid and Dallas City Hall.

Notre Dame cathedral

Sticking with the theme of iconic Parisian locations … the Notre Dame cathedral, which was devastated by a fire in 2019, cost around $760 million to restore a few years ago. Even with the recent inflation, that’s still safely below the $1.14 billion top-end estimate to fix Dallas City Hall.