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Financing-plan trouble halts Vantage Lofts work

Slade chairman cites problems with lender




Construction has stopped on Vantage Lofts in Henderson and the sales center is closed while Slade Development works out a new financing plan, Chairman Stacy Slade said.

"We're restructuring the capital and during that time, I didn't want to be delinquent on payments to a bunch of subcontractors," Slade said.


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  • He expects financing will be in place within the next couple of weeks and then he'll proceed with construction.

    The first building with 40 units is near completion and people could be moving into their units within the next three to four months, he said. He's been communicating with buyers on the project's status.

    "The market is down. That's no secret," Slade said. "Based on the climate and the market, sales are not what we anticipated. We thought there would be a correction. Vegas has always had nice steady growth. When we've had a downturn, it hasn't been that dramatic. We've always had ups and downs, but never a correction as dramatic as this."

    Slade said his second-position lender, sometimes called mezzanine, hasn't cooperated in restructuring the loan and was "causing difficulty for us." He is asking for deferred interest payments.

    Scripps Investments and Loans of La Jolla, Calif., is the primary lender on the $160 million project, which will have more than 300 units on 20 acres when completed.

    Completion of the 110-unit first phase was originally scheduled for early 2007. Again, a change in the secondary lender, along with design and engineering issues, delayed the project, Slade said.

    "I'm very positive that the project will get completed," he said. "It's still a great project, but the market's got to come back for us to finish out."

    Vantage Lofts is on Gibson Road near the foothills of Black Mountain. Floor plans range from 1,000 square feet to 2,600 square feet. Sales prices are holding steady at about $400 a square foot with some incentives, Slade said.

    HIGH-RISE DEAD: Pinnacle Las Vegas, a high-rise condo project planned for the former site of Falconi Honda on Tropicana Avenue, has been canceled.

    The sales gallery was closed Feb. 22 and agents have been laid off, said Kyle Waugh of Rise Realty, the broker of record. Nevada Title has been instructed to expedite the release of buyers' deposits along with interest in accordance to their contract, he said.

    "It's unfortunate because we were very successful in selling the units in a short period of time," Waugh said. "Pinnacle offered a great package. I talked to several buyers and they're happy that their deposits are being returned, but they're disappointed that it didn't get out of the ground."

    Pinnacle was distinguished in its design by a "sky bridge" connecting two 36-story towers with 1,100 luxury condo units. YWS was the architect.

    When the $650 million project was announced in 2005, developers were confident it wouldn't end up in the junk pile with other high-rises such as Krystal Sands, Aqua Blue and Icon because the 12-acre site was owned free and clear by Angelo Falconi. The land was valued at about $8 million an acre.

    RISING VACANCY: Apartment vacancy in Las Vegas rose to 9 percent in January, up from 8.4 percent in December, CB Richard Ellis, a commercial real estate brokerage, reported. The breakdown by class shows 7.76 percent for Class A (28,082 units), 9.38 percent for Class B (42,000 units) and 9.67 percent for Class C (26,148 units).

    TOP SELLER: High-rise condo broker Aaron Auxier of Luxury Realty Group said he set sales records at MGM Mirage's CityCenter with three units at The Harmon Residences that went for $1,500, $2,000 and $2,400 a square foot. It's the most expensive price-per-square-foot home or condo ever sold in Las Vegas, he said. The previous record was just over $1,300 a square foot for a luxury condo.

    KORTE PROJECT: Korte Co. was named general contractor for $1.2 million in tenant improvement work at the 28,000-square-foot Stein Mart store at Shadow Mountain Marketplace, 6435 N. Decatur Blvd.

    PALAZZO STORES: Crisci Builders finished interior buildout for Diane Von Furstenberg women's fashions and Elton's men's store inside the Palazzo. The two jobs were worth $1.6 million.

    Contact reporter Hubble Smith at hsmith@reviewjournal.com or (702) 383-0491.

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    Report abuse

    dwc wrote on March 04, 2008 07:38 AM: $600,000 for a piece of claptrap??? With your nextdoor neighbor a mere 6 inches of unsoundproofed 2x4 and gypsum!?! Suckers, Jason K, suckers!!! Any one of those 2 story houses along the horizon ridge developments will get you the view. And if'n you weren't such a sucker, you wouldn't have paid 600G's for a house twice the size, in which you wouldn't be able to hear your sucker neighbor snoring or beating his wife. Someone said suckers, and I can't disagree.


    Report abuse

    Jason K wrote on March 03, 2008 09:31 PM: Edwin, I disagree with your assessment of Vantage Lofts. A 1,500 sq ft condo with a fantastic view of the Strip is only $600,000. Tell me of another place where you can get 2 bedrooms and underground outside parking only 12 miles from the action. No way, man.


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    Edwin Loring wrote on March 03, 2008 09:16 PM: I've been waiting for an article about Vantage Lofts. I live 1/2 mile away, and have watched how the project seemed to mosey along-It once had a Spring 2007 occupancy date, but there was no way that it would ever even come close to completion near that date. The drywall took forever, and even after it was complete, the subsequent exterior stucco work was delayed for months. There is still scaffolding hanging off the rear of the building. The painters have obviously stopped work. The most ominous trouble sign was that the "visitor center" wasn't even built until just before the construction was halted. Now it has a plywood front door. As an old construction superintendent, it's obvious to me that this eyesore on the Black Mountain slopes will be there for a long while. And I wonder how the City of Henderson allows these developers to have unfinished, hopeless projects, of which Vantage Lofts is just one of many around Horizon Ridge Drive, sit for years. Is there no time limit for the work? There are so many stripped lots, sitting with "Land for Sale signs". Or is the City just like the Water Authority, approving more and more projects, just to keep "plan checkers" and "inspectors" working, in spite of a drastic slowdown in construction and a falling lake level?"


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    Fools wrote on March 03, 2008 08:35 PM: With the Euro at $1.52 per dollar, you know who is buying. Euro trash and Rag Headed petro dollar buyers!


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    BC wrote on March 03, 2008 01:34 PM: $00Grand just to get in to that dump??? It's just particle board and stucco, for F's sake! Suckers!