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Some wonder what fate awaits frames of stopped-in-progress Strip projects
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Jessica Ebelhar/Las Vegas Review-Journal
Las Vegas Sands Corp. stopped construction on its $600 million St. Regis condominium tower in November 2008 when financial problems besieged the company. The tower, which is 19 stories, has not been worked on since; two unused construction cranes are secured to the roof. » Buy this photo
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Work on Emerald River, a planned $800 million hotel, casino, golf and resort complex in Laughlin, was stopped more than 20 years ago. The concrete and steel towers still stand near the Colorado River's edge. Howard Stutz/Las Vegas Review-Journal » Buy this photo
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
In Laughlin, a few miles up Casino Drive from the cluster of the town's resorts, sits the hulking shell of what was to have been the Emerald River, an $800 million hotel, casino, golf and resort complex.
Fourteen floors of one hotel tower and seven floors of a second were completed before the money ran out, the project went bankrupt and construction stopped.
That was more than 20 years ago.
The concrete and steel towers still remain near the edge of the Colorado River, rising above overgrown weeds and desert foliage.
Some people wonder whether this could be the future of several land parcels along the Strip.
Construction of Echelon, a $4.8 billion development by Boyd Gaming Corp. at a site on which the Stardust once stood, closed down in August 2008, leaving unfinished steel and concrete structures. The company is not planning to restart the project for at least three to five years.
Across Las Vegas Boulevard sits the dormant Fontainebleau. The $3 billion resort was 70 percent complete when lenders pulled the plug on it in April 2009. Billionaire corporate raider Carl Icahn bought the development out of bankruptcy for $150 million in February 2010, sold off much of the hotel's furnishings, and has not announced any plans for the building.
Las Vegas Sands Corp. stopped construction on its $600 million St. Regis condominium tower in November 2008 when financial problems besieged the company. The tower, which is 19 stories, has not been worked on since. Two unused construction cranes are secured to the roof.
Other projects were halted in midconstruction in 2009 because of economic reasons. The Shops at Summerlin Centre next to Red Rock Resort shut down when developer General Growth Properties filed for bankruptcy. A Wyndham Vacation Ownership development across from the Rio stopped when funding disappeared.
The steel and concrete skeletons may still have some life.
Clark County Development Services officials and structural engineers said Southern Nevada's dry desert climate allows incomplete structures to retain their usefulness once a project is restarted.
You may not want to read this, but like Emerald River, unfinished developments could last for 20 years.
"This is actually the ideal environment for these buildings to be sustained," Clark County Development Services Director Ron Lynn said. "We don't have a freeze-thaw cycle that could be devastating to structures. It's not like being near the ocean with high humidity and salt air. We have a very low-corrosive environment."
Wright Structural Engineers Chief Executive Officer Brent Wright agreed that dry desert air keeps exposed steel and concrete structurally sound. The bigger challenge involves the county's building codes, which often change every few years.
"That's more of an issue than materials deteriorating," Wright said. "If codes change, by the time a project is restarted, some retrofitting might have to take place. The changes could be significant or minor."
When the projects were halted, Clark County officials ran through a checklist of shutdown functions. Lynn said decommissioning is different for every site.
The Shops at Summerlin, which is predominantly steel, needs to be secured by fencing. The Fontainebleau is more complicated. The hotel tower was close to operational, so fire alarms and smoke suppression systems need to be maintained and regularly checked. Elevators also have to be kept operational.
Clark County building inspectors don't check Summerlin Centre as often as they visit Fontainebleau.
"Because of its state of completion, we look at the Fontainebleau more closely," Lynn said.
Boyd Gaming continues to spend an undisclosed amount of money each quarter to maintain the Echelon site. The company provides 24-hour security and surveillance for the fenced-off 87-acre location and operates 150,000 square feet of warehouse space to store unused building materials and construction equipment.
"Our goal is preserve the site and the structure in order to maintain and protect its value," company spokesman David Strow said.
Boyd also operates a system for preventing water buildup.
"Water is the enemy that would have the biggest impact on an unfinished building," said Ken Zarembski, managing director of Walter P. Moore Engineers + Consultants. "Structurally, steel doesn't change. As long as it doesn't rust, it could last a long time."
None of the stalled projects are anywhere near restarting.
The Howard Hughes Corp. took back the Summerlin Centre site from General Growth and is evaluating options.
"We will continue to monitor and evaluate all market variables and conditions, and coordinate with our retail partners to determine when the development will move forward," Howard Hughes Corp. Senior Vice President Tom Warden said.
Las Vegas Sands spokesman Ron Reese there is a continuing evaluation of the St. Regis tower. The company owns the cranes and is expected to remove them from the tower by the end of March. Reese said the building will be wrapped in construction material by May or June.
"There are a series of conversations taking place on what can be done there, but nothing is finalized," Reese said.
Investors don't seem to mind the inactivity. With 150,000 hotel rooms in a recovering market, Union Gaming Group Principal Bill Lerner said the last thing Wall Street wants to see is more lodging capacity.
Echelon, for example, was to have included multiple hotels totaling 5,000 rooms, a shopping mall and a 140,000-square-foot casino. Lerner doesn't think the project will be revived in that model.
"People understand what has happened to the market," Lerner said. "Investors are hopeful that when projects are restarted, the timing will be right."
Lynn said any restarted projects would undergo a "recommissioning process," ensuring the buildings are structurally sound and meet Clark County code. Even though construction work has stopped, structures are continually inspected.
Every month, inspectors from the Clark County Development Services check out the integrity of the Emerald River buildings and ensure that there is adequate fencing so the site is secured.
For all he knows, Lynn could be sending inspectors for another 20 years. News hasn't surfaced about Emerald River since 2005.
Jim Shaw, who represents Riverside Development, the current owner of the site, said the unfinished towers are "structurally sound." Plans to develop the project are on indefinite hold, Shaw said. But whatever is eventually built may involve the structures.
Could the Emerald River towers still be used after more than 20 years?
"That might be pressing it," Zarembski said.
Contact reporter Howard Stutz at hstutz@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3871.
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@NewNVRes-
And guess which city has actually experienced growth in the past 20 years...
Those that made the decisions to build these monstrosities in the first place should be fired. Billion dollar mistakes, forced upon investors, are unacceptable. Do you think Murren, Adelson and the likes are taking any hits from their bad decisions? They may have not foreseen the consequences of their decisions, but they most assuredly should take responsibility.
Howard, do these stalled projects pay the county for continually inspecting there unfinished structures?
OLGA: that would be great. it's a chicken vs egg scenario though in terms of labor pool -- which in Vegas is very unattractive to high tech companies like Boeing. Nevada, as has been publicized lately, is at the bottom in nearly every significant educational ranking in this country (which itself is barely in the top 50 in many important educational categories like science and math). I think Nevada and Vegas specifically needs a world class university first and foremost and that will attract things like major corporations moving here. UNLV is not a candidate -- it is basically a hair above a J.C. and everyone knows that. go randomly look for 21-40 year olds in Vegas and compare them to places like San Francisco, Boston, Washington DC and you will think Vegas is another planet by how comparatively stupid and vapid our younger people are. I guess that's great for nightclubs and strip joints, but not so good for the important big picture quality of life stuff.
All owners should be required to wrap the outside of there eyesores or tear them down. Caesars was the only responsible company by finishing the outside and giving their property a polished look.
Atlanta has a Patent on their skyline. If you wish to build, get approval of you building - If it does not match to the completed specs approved for what you were proposing - tear it down. Guess which city does not have a bunch of unfinished high-rises?
LVS does have the $ to complete the project, but they would rather focus on building in Macau. The government should force Adelson to finsh what he started at home before investing $ from LVS, which has been on a huge run because of the Asia business.
I don't care what these engineers say. Having the raw steel sit there through 4 or 5 years cannot be good. The building will be tarnished forever more.
At least Caesars Palace had the decency to finish the outside of their unfinished, unused tower on Flamingo Rd. so it at least LOOKS complete.... The others should do the same.
Everything in Las Vegas can be a tourist attraction. Why don't they just build a walkway in all those unfinished structures, give them a hard hat and charged every tourist a dollar to see the unfinished steel beam structures.
Call this the "Las Vegas unfinished art museum".
The tourist would not know the difference :) :)