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BY CRANES ON LANE, ECONOMY WILL GAIN

Strip construction boom may be just what Las Vegas needs to add jobs, prosperity







In Washington, D.C., leaders have been discussing economic stimulus packages, trying to figure out ways to jump-start the nation's sagging financial picture and calm fears of a recession.

Las Vegas has its own way of surviving economic downturns -- build more Strip resorts.


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  • History has shown the Las Vegas economy rebounds from any economic slump when the Strip goes through a building boom.

    Observers believe today's extensive Strip makeover will be no exception. Some 40,000 new hotel rooms are in phases of planning and construction along Las Vegas Boulevard that will keep a construction work force employed through 2012.

    When the projects are completed, roughly $30 billion will have been invested and the Strip's room capacity will have jumped 30 percent.

    Deutsche Bank, in a report to investors, said the building boom will create upward of 120,000 new jobs. The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority said the room inventory expansion could boost room tax collections to more than $571.8 million annually, 30 percent higher than the current collections. The tourism bureau said it expects Las Vegas to attract 43 million visitors by 2010, a 10 percent increase over the 2007 projection of more than 39 million.

    A SHOT IN THE ARM

    Gaming analysts, economists and casino industry leaders said the employment and tax dollars fueled by the resort openings will give the Las Vegas Valley a well-needed boost.

    "When you look at the annual employment growth, naturally the largest historical trends flourish during the openings of major resorts," said Brian Gordon, a partner in Las Vegas-based Applied Analysis, a financial consulting firm.

    "The impact has a ripple effect that has proven itself time and time again. Businesses not associated with the gaming industry experience that effect," Gordon said.

    The increase in Strip resort employment means more jobs in other areas: professional services, retail, commercial services -- all needed to service an increase in the Las Vegas Valley's population.

    Residential home sales are off roughly 44 percent. Taxable sales are down and consumer spending has dwindled, Gordon said, which is partly attributable to the national economic climate. Much of those conditions are expected to change, he said, with expansion in the resort corridor.

    "Las Vegas is like no other market," Gordon said. "There are really not any other comparisons."

    Craig Shute, managing director of commercial real estate firm CB Richard Ellis, said the general business community is expecting the economic bump associated with the Strip expansion. The commercial real estate market is still healthy in Las Vegas, Shute said. Additional resorts could create additional demand for office space.

    "You can see the correlation pretty closely," Shute said. "The resorts will create a lot of jobs. That's going to extend into other areas as well."

    Las Vegas Sands Corp. opened the $1.9 billion Palazzo in January. The $2.1 billion Encore, a resort being built by Wynn Resorts Ltd. adjacent to the company's Wynn Las Vegas, is expected to open by the end of the year. This spring, the 1,282-unit Trump International Hotel & Tower is expected to open, but the project does not include a casino.

    Analysts, however, point toward the end of 2009 as the target date when the greatest impact could be felt.

    In November of that year, MGM Mirage is expected to begin opening its multibillion-dollar CityCenter development on the Strip's southern end between Bellagio and Monte Carlo. The 77-acre site includes a 4,000-room hotel-casino, three boutique hotels that will include high-priced residential condominiums and a luxury condominium-only development. The hotels and condos will connect with a retail, entertainment and dining complex.

    CityCenter, which has now been estimated to cost between $8.1 billion and $8.4 billion, has been billed as the largest and most expensive private commercial construction project ever in the United States. When it opens, it is expected to provide jobs for more than 12,000 workers.

    "The sheer impact of CityCenter is hard to compare because we've never seen a project of this magnitude," Gordon said.

    MGM Mirage President and Chief Operating Officer Jim Murren knows the business community is eagerly awaiting CityCenter.

    "The Las Vegas economy in general is suffering," Murren said. "It's a pretty daunting responsibility for us, but one we're willing to shoulder."

    In 2010, the $2.9 billion Fontainebleau development on the Strip's north end is expected to open with some 4,000 hotel rooms and condominiums, along with Echelon, Boyd Gaming's $4.8 billion, multiple hotel development.

    In the ensuing years, the Crown Las Vegas, Elad's Plaza project and a joint-venture development between MGM Mirage and Kerzner Holdings International are expected to be completed.

    If history is a barometer, then the Las Vegas resort building boom will translate into employment growth, both inside and outside the hotel-casino industry.

    According to figures from the Nevada Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilitation and supplied by Applied Analysis, in 1990, following the openings of The Mirage and Excalibur, more than 41,600 jobs were created, both tourism-related jobs and positions in other businesses and industries.

    Four years later, the openings of the Luxor, MGM Grand and Treasure Island fueled an expansion that created 59,700 new positions.

    In 1996, after Monte Carlo, New York-New York and Stratosphere opened, 52,300 jobs were created. The 1998 and 1999 openings of Bellagio, Mandalay Bay, The Venetian and Paris Las Vegas resulted in 51,300 new jobs hitting the marketplace.

    "The general economy will pick back up by the end of 2009, maybe even before," Shute said. "You can't build all these resorts and not staff them."

    Murren said the new development figures don't include the $1 billion the company plans to spend on renovations to its older Strip casinos. Most of the reinvestments will be directed toward nongaming amenities, Murren said, such as restaurants and nightclubs, which also have staffing needs as well.

    Of the 12,000 jobs MGM Mirage is creating at CityCenter, about 6,000 workers will come from other MGM Mirage properties, meaning those resorts losing workers will have to fill vacant jobs.

    The job hiring may stretch up and down the Strip at casinos losing workers to the newer resorts.

    "A project of CityCenter's magnitude creates significant employment," Murren said. "It also creates new businesses and new industries into the market. It's a much more intensive development than building another Bellagio next to Bellagio."

    Murren said development on the Strip also means there could be a boost for locals casinos as well through an influx of new residents coming to work at the Strip resorts.

    "My buddies Frank and Lorenzo Fertitta (majority owners of Station Casinos) always give us a hug and tell us to keep going," Murren said. "What's good for us is good for them."

    This story first appeared in the Business Press. Howard Stutz writes for the Business Press' sister publication, the Las Vegas Review-Journal. He can be reached at hstutz@reviewjournal.com or 477-3871.

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    cas127 wrote on February 16, 2008 01:03 PM: And think of all the jobs at the shuttered Cosmo - watching the idled frame rust...


    jk wrote on February 13, 2008 04:57 PM: It's great news for Vegas.More hotel rooms to generate more tax money,jobs,and income.More huge projects also do that like City Center. The housing market is on the downslide now,but that won't last forever. The Convention & visitors authority wants to increase tourism.It's all a beautiful thing.What I'd like to know is,where exactly is the water coming from to accommadate all this growth! Has any reader seen Lake Mead lately,or the predictions of what it's not going to be.It's all a beautiful thing!


    Rosy Predictions wrote on February 10, 2008 04:42 PM: I want some of the drugs these guys are on!


    David Huntington wrote on February 10, 2008 12:15 PM: "The Las Vegas economy in general is suffering," Murren said. "It's a pretty daunting responsibility for us, but one we're willing to shoulder."

    Well, isn't that white of them. How nice of them to shoulder the responsibility of creating more traffic congestion and low wage jobs. All for the sake of gargantuan corporate profits, huge executive bonuses and a laurel and hardy handshake to the employees for their contribution to the company.


    GOD wrote on February 10, 2008 11:26 AM: the chad uses good statistics and science in his reasoning -- excellent posts from everyone expressing reality versus what the bean counters want us to believe.

    Las Vegas definitely overbuilt and if you think the strip is slow now, just wait until the other casino/hotels are finished.


    the chad wrote on February 10, 2008 10:54 AM: 4 million divided by 365 = 10,959 visitors per day additional. consider it is most likely 75% of those will come as a couple and will only need 1 room, that works out to about 6,850 needed room nights not considering the few that will fly in and stay with friends/family. So 40,000 - 6850 = 33,150 rooms sitting empty on top of the % of rooms that sit empty nightly, somewhere in the neighborhood of 3 to 5% on average according to reports in the summer, which will result in a handfull(sarcasim) of rooms needing to be occupied. And what happens when you have empty rooms? The price comes down which means it will take longer for MGM and others to pay for their 8 billion dollar projects. Unless that A/P gets a move on in Primm, the needed influx of visitors won't be able to come by air, Mccarren is already busy enough and needs a runway re-do, the only other possibility is land travel, but oh wait, that infrastructure is behind the times too, soooooo looks like cheaper rooms are heading to the strip! Maybe it wil have an effect on restaurant prices too and I can actually afford to eat out more.


    pmt wrote on February 10, 2008 10:25 AM: This article paints the usual rosy forcasts for the LV economy. All these assumptions are based on flawed economic models on par with the housing models that have now proven bunk. These assumptions are all based on single variable, linear growth projections and don't take into account any turbulence in the national and worldwide economies. Applied analysis is nothing more than bought out shills for the development community. Analysis my @ss.


    Investor wrote on February 10, 2008 09:53 AM: Las Vegas is a one industry town. be wary of this fact as you look to the future! These commerical projects were conceived and partially funded 4-5 years ago ( and currently bailed out with foreign Dubai/Chinese/Euro Petro Dollars). If the economy does not break toward the upside after these projects come online,watch the wholesale writedowns and bankrupies of the projects!


    FastTracker wrote on February 10, 2008 07:44 AM: Let's see, according to the article, you have a 10% projected increase in visitors to Las Vegas by 2010, with 40,000 rooms coming on line.

    The increase in rooms – roughly 130,00 to 170,000 – should be in the realm of 30%.

    Can anyone explain how a 10% gain in visitors will achieve anything close to desired occupancy for some 30% extra rooms?