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Shiny new Shoppes at Palazzo

Mall's retailers say they can weather economy's downturn

Consumers feeling poorer, a major Strip resort project mired in default and a looming national recession are conditions fancy retailers on Las Vegas Boulevard would like to avoid.

But those are situations they're confronting head-on today at the opening of the Shoppes at Palazzo, a 450,000-square-foot mall that's part of the Strip's newest resort.


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  • "I don't think anyone would dispute now is probably not the ideal time" to open a mall, said Michael Kammerling, senior vice president for retail at Grubb & Ellis in Las Vegas.

    The opening comes after retailers nationally completed their worst holiday season in five years; owners of the Cosmopolitan, a $3 billion Strip resort project, announced they are in default on a $760 million construction loan; and near-record oil prices are making it costlier to visit Las Vegas.

    Palazzo retailers are betting the drawing power of Las Vegas and the novelty of 34 new-to-market stores and restaurants will be enough to overcome the glum business headlines.

    Customers who spend $670 on Barbarella boots by Alexandra Neel at Barneys, $125 on T-shirts at Tory Burch and $5,000 on wine at Charlie Trotter's tend to weather hard times better than most.

    "We all know those people tend to be a little more impervious to fluctuations in the economy," Kammerling said.

    The Palazzo Shoppes are 90 percent leased, said Dan Sheridan, executive vice president of General Growth Properties, which will own and operate the mall. It's the second-largest real estate investment trust in the country and also owns The Grand Canal Shoppes at The Venetian and the Fashion Show, Meadows and Boulevard malls in Las Vegas.

    As part of a $1.9 billion resort project, the Shoppes at Palazzo were planned on a much longer time frame than the current business cycle. Only a fraction of the projected 60 stores are open so far.

    "It is a long-term play for those tenants," Kammerling said. "They sign the leases and expect to be there a long time."

    For now, Palazzo retailers are focusing on the lucrative Las Vegas customer base, not sweating a potential recession.

    "I love the fact that Las Vegas attracts visitors from all over the world, but also has such a sophisticated and cultured local community," fashion designer Tory Burch said by e-mail. "Las Vegas has clearly become a center for luxury retailing, and we are thrilled to be opening stores there."

    Burch, who opened her first store in New York City in 2004, plans to open a store in the Forum Shops at Caesars later this month.

    She says her merchandise is for women who want chic and sophisticated clothing and accessories but don't want to spend a lot of money.

    But Burch, and everyone else at Palazzo, need to do enough high-end business to pay what is likely some of the highest retail rent in the country.

    None of the retailers interviewed would say how much it costs to lease space in the mall, but Kammerling estimated it could be as much as $300 per square foot.

    That's more than space at Fashion Show or the Forum Shops at Caesars, two prominent malls on the Strip, and much higher than the $40 per square foot The Wall Street Journal reported as the national average for rent in a regional mall.

    "I always like to keep the overhead down, but they do draw a lot of people and I think they are our kind of people," said Dave Bauman of Bauman Rare Books, said of the cost of rent at Palazzo.

    In February Bauman is scheduled to open a 2,300-square-foot store in Palazzo that will carry items such as the first newspaper copy of the Constitution, a book once owned by Thomas Jefferson, manuscripts and historically significant books and documents. Prices for the merchandise vary but generally range from $500 to $350,000, Bauman said.

    He doesn't worry about doing business during an economic slump.

    "We've been in business 35 years," said Bauman, who has stores in New York and Philadelphia. "We've seen the economy go through all sorts of gyrations."

    He said the rare-book market holds up well when times are bad. That's because collecting books can be cheaper than hobbies such as buying art.

    "It is a very conservative, low key market that affords very good value," Bauman said. "For the price of a painting you can have a library."

    Contact reporter Benjamin Spillman at bspillman@reviewjournal.com or (702) 477-3861.

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    Report abuse

    Tom Turkey wrote on January 18, 2008 10:53 PM: The income of the upper class (not the upper middle class) is tied mainly to the stock market's performance. When it falls 9% in 13 days they tend to tighten their spending. These new stores need to be focused on drawing shoppers from Europe and the Middle East, which is a tough sell because upper-class shoppers from those locations are traditionally not very respectful of Las Vegas "culture".

    "We all know those people tend to be a little more impervious to fluctuations in the economy," Kammerling said.


    Report abuse

    Manny C wrote on January 18, 2008 07:48 PM: What's wrong with paying $125.00 for a T-shirt? If they have the money and they are willing to spend that much for a T-shirt they can buy at Target for $5.00, so be it. It's good for Las Vegas economy.
    God, I love America!!!!!


    Report abuse

    VegasResident wrote on January 18, 2008 03:06 PM: God...all you need to understand is that these shops only need one idiot to pay $125 for a t shirt made in a Taiwan sweat shop for less than a buck! I really get a kick wandering thru these joints and seeing the touristas flashing large $$$ trying to impress their arm candy dates or fawning over doo dads totally over priced. But I must admit greater schmos still abound as long as their credit cards hold up and the old saying a "fool and his money are quickly parted" comes to mind!


    Report abuse

    Mark$ wrote on January 18, 2008 11:41 AM: Marie Antoinette would feel right at home in Sheldon-Adelson-Palooka-Palazzo-Ville .. "Your highness, while you frolic in luxury and shop for baubles, millions of American kids have no health insurance and billions go hungry around the world every night". Marie, "Oh silly darling! Let them eat my Barberella boots!"


    Report abuse

    GOD wrote on January 18, 2008 10:57 AM: I've already done a lot of shopping at the Palazzo shops and find them to be quite pleasant... WINDOW SHOPPING.

    I'm amazed at how some of the stores at the Forum shops and Palazzo can stay open. I never see anyone in them.


    Report abuse

    VegasResident wrote on January 18, 2008 09:41 AM: The Strip shops are fantasy land totally out of whack with normal reality for most americans. Comeon folks, $125 for a t shirt! Only someone wioth more money than brains would pay that! But there are folks out there LOL! I guess for me Palazzo will be a great place to take a dump since they got great restrooms!They are big enough for Larry Craig to have a Village People Show!