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THE STRIP: Work stopped on west tower at Cosmopolitan

Progress stopped on tower; source says bank signs deal with Hilton Hotels




Construction has stopped on a portion of the Cosmopolitan's west tower while some floors go through a redesign, sources familiar with the project said.

Also, a reliable source familiar with the industry said Deutsche Bank, which owns the $3.9 billion project, signed an agreement Thursday with Hilton Hotels Corp. related to the project.


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  • Deutsche Bank does not have a license to operate a casino and has been looking for an operator to run the Cosmopolitan's casino and hotel operations since it acquired the project for $1 billion at a foreclosure sale in August.

    Deutsche Bank, whose officials were in Las Vegas this week, declined to comment on the reports late Friday.

    Hilton Hotels did not return calls or e-mails Thursday and Friday seeking comment.

    Deutsche Bank hired New York-based Related Cos. in September to oversee development of the project, which was half-finished when the bank acquired it after former developer and owner Bruce Eichner and his company, 3700 Associates LLC, entered foreclosure proceedings.

    The Cosmopolitan is scheduled to open the second quarter of 2010.

    John Smirk, secretary-treasurer of the Painters Union Local 159, told The Associated Press the Southern Nevada Building and Construction Trades Council was notified earlier this week that work on the west tower was being suspended. Three hundred painters were laid off Wednesday, he said.

    Council spokesman Steve Redlinger said the unions discussed the Cosmopolitan this week with Perini Building Co., the project's general contractor, although he declined to disclose the nature of those talks.

    The painters were laid off the same day that negotiations broke off between the bank and MGM Mirage involving the Cosmopolitan.

    Sources reported that Deutsche Bank wanted MGM Mirage to operate or take an ownership stake in the Cosmopolitan in exchange for nearly $1.2 billion in financing that the casino company needs to complete its CityCenter financing.

    MGM Mirage spokesman Alan Feldman said Thursday the company would "pursue options that are far better than Deutsche Bank presented" to obtain financing for CityCenter, which it owns in a 50-50 joint-venture partnership with Dubai World, the investment arm of the Persian Gulf state.

    Although interior work on the tower has been suspended, all exterior construction on the west and east towers, casino and amenities is proceeding as normal, the sources said.

    The project is designed for 2,998 hotel-condominium units on 8.5 acres between MGM Mirage's CityCenter and Bellagio on the Strip.

    Contracts were held on 1,825 units in late October, the last time that data was reported.

    A few lawsuits have been filed in Nevada federal court and Clark County District Court by some buyers who want their deposits, some of which were paid as long as four years ago, refunded.

    Contact reporter Arnold M. Knightly at aknightly@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3893.

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    Report abuse

    wettap wrote on March 13, 2009 08:04 AM: Suddenly, I am very glad that I didn't get in on the "sweetheart" deal offered my by some City Center snake oil saleman last year.

    Don't delay! You'll regret missing this opportunity!


    Report abuse

    manipulativeegomaniac wrote on March 07, 2009 10:55 AM: The mayor is certainly the greatest friend of the taxpayers to want to spend our higher future tax dollars now to build a city hall we don't need! Why don't we use that $150 million to build something equally useless, oh, say, a couple more 20-room mansions for the rich and powerful of the city? a giant swimming pool so we can all swim with dolphins? or maybe chisel the face of Oscar Goodman on the mountains? That'd also create lots of jobs now and do absolutely NOTHING for the city in the long run! Yeah!


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    ruffus327 wrote on March 07, 2009 09:56 AM: Hey Cosmo owners - we are a group of 180 unit owners and have already filed a class-action suit on February 10th to get our hard earned deposits back. We did this before Robin Leach did his... Join us! send me an email at ruffus327@aol.com and I will work to get you on our list. DO NOT HESITATE as we do not know how much longer we can accept plaintiffs!
    Regards


    Report abuse

    2zero wrote on March 07, 2009 09:39 AM: Thank God for Oscar????

    Oscar is the anti-christ!

    The Cosmopolitan is going with the "ghost town" motif, tumbleweeds and empty halls will be ahead of the rest, but not by much..


    Report abuse

    casinocon wrote on March 07, 2009 09:03 AM: This just keep getting weirder and weirder. Why did Deutsche Bank spend a billion on this hunk of junk? MGM has some gall to refuse the deal when Deutsche is offering them help -- I mean wasn't the design of City Center MGM's brain child to begin with? So MGM starts this whole mess and then lets each piece fall by the wayside. City Center was once touted as the largest private development ever -- but since MGM stock is publicly traded, I wouldn't exactly call it private, plenty of stockholders have lost billions -- but will go down in history books as the biggest building disaster ever. The bigger they are the harder they fall. Timber!


    Report abuse

    EatEscrow wrote on March 07, 2009 08:56 AM: City Center = biggest "white elephant" in American business history, the day it opens


    Report abuse

    Lee Yarbrough wrote on March 07, 2009 06:06 AM: Mr Stacy,

    You should have read the whole article. They have not stopped building, they have just stopped working on the inside until they redesign it. This hotel will be completed and opened.

    Yes, we need our great Mayor to build a new building that we do not have the money to build. Lets take on some more debt so that a few construction workers will have something to do while the rest of the people of this city pay for it.

    I hope you are one of the first standing at the Mayors office with your checkbook paying for this new building.


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    mrstacy wrote on March 07, 2009 04:19 AM: Another example of the private sector not leading us out of this economic collapse. Now is when the public sector should be doing infrastructure projects.

    Las Vegas is a great laboratory on this argument on who really lead us to recovery. We have more private sector projects going than anyone and they are all shutting down.

    Thank God for our mayor who wants to see that a new city hall is built. We may have to convince the LVCVA and airport to continue with their projects even though they'd be empty for s long while.