Comments (34) | Add a comment
Sahara hotel-casino renovation approved
-
Jessica Ebelhar/Las Vegas Review-Journal
The closed Sahara hotel-casino, seen Wednesday on the Strip, will get a face-lift and new life. » Buy this photo
Tools
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Updated: Nov. 3, 2011 | 7:23 a.m.
Once the epicenter of Las Vegas glitz and glam, the Sahara now sits empty on the Strip.
No more 6-pound burritos. No more roller coaster.
The Sahara was forced to close its doors six months ago after falling victim to the recession, but a remodeling plan approved unanimously Wednesday by the Clark County Commission could breathe life into a hotel-casino that served celebrities and common folk alike for almost 60 years.
County officials also hope the project will breathe new life into the north end of the Strip, which has seen better times.
According to the plan, the existing room towers, the Tunis, Tangiers and Alexandria, will be renovated. The roller coaster will be dismantled and a 2,830-square-foot beer garden will be constructed. The number of hotel rooms will be decreased from 1,700 to 1,622.
Retail, tenant and restaurant spaces will be added, and the casino floor will be renovated. A 21,000-square-foot nightclub will be built, and 41,000 square feet of meeting and convention space will be added with a new pool deck area.
It's unclear when construction will start and how much the renovation project will cost. Those figures were not included in the plans, and owners SBE Entertainment of Los Angeles and private equity firm Stockbridge Real Estate of San Francisco did not comment.
According to county staff analysis included with the plans, remodeling the nearly 18-acre property bordered by Sahara Avenue, Las Vegas Boulevard South and Paradise Road could enhance the area where construction projects such as Fontainebleau and the Echelon resort have stalled.
Commissioner Chris Giunchigliani, who represents the area, echoed the comments and said the plan will generate the foot traffic needed to boost the economy in that portion of the Strip.
"This may be the synergy needed to kick start some of the properties on that side. ... This is spending in the economy, taking the package you have and using it to the best of your advantage," Giunchigliani said. "I'm excited. I'm happy and glad that the Sahara, even though it might not have the same view, is still there."
The issue of Internet gaming is generating a "comfort level coming back into that area in the realm of gaming," which could indicate somewhat of an economic rebound, she added.
"I think we're still premature in that," Giunchigliani said. "I think people are poised. It will take a couple of years to do the remodel and what not, but it might be the right window. For commercial and housing, we're still a way off."
This isn't the first discussion county officials and property owners have had regarding renovation.
Redevelopment of the Sahara property began in 2007 but was put on hold two years later because of the economic downturn.
It's one of the oldest existing properties within the resort corridor and was most recently renovated in 1999. Mega- resorts constructed during the area's two-decade building boom dwarfed the aged Sahara.
The property owners acquired the hotel-casino in 2007 from the family of late casino pioneer William Bennett.
In March, SBE said it was "no longer economically viable" to operate the Sahara. The Moroccan-themed hotel-casino closed in May, and the property's 1,050 workers had to search for employment. About two dozen of them were hired by the Stratosphere.
SBE has been able to find funding since then, Giunchigliani said. Details on that funding were not released Wednesday.
Contact reporter Kristi Jourdan at kjourdan@reviewjournal.com or 702-455-4519. Review-Journal writer Howard Stutz contributed to this report.
Comments
Terms & Conditions
The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The Review-Journal does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please use the Report Abuse button.
Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 24 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.
Note: Comments made by reporters and editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal are presented with a yellow background.











RSS

As a regular visitor from Australia I kinda liked the Sahara, it had the old school cool that the characterless new office block type hotels (which now block the once great Las Vegas strip views) seem to lack. Then again, I liked the Desert Inn and the Stardust as well..Lets hope a little personality stands defiant in the face the overwhelming blandness currently being imposed on this once fun city. Good luck Sahara.
I THINK THE MAIN REASON THE CASENO LOST ALOT OF PEOPLE WAS BECAUSE THEY CLOSED THE BUFFEE ALL OTHER RESTRUANTS IN THAT HOTEL AND CASENO HAD LOUSEY FOOD. I AND MY FAMILY ATE IN ALL THE OTHER STORES. THE COFFEE SHOP FOOD WAS ALWAYS COLD OR IT WASN' T WHAT YOU ORDERED. IT GOT WORSE WHEN THEY MOVED IT TO THE OTHER SIDE OF THE CASENO. THE STEAKHOUSE WAS EVEN WORSE. YOU WENT IN TO THE SYEAKHOUSE ORDERED IT WAS SO HARD YOU COULDN"T CUT IT WITH A STEAK KNIFE. YOU COULD HEAR PEOPLE COMPLAINING ABOUT THE FOOD. EVEN WHEN YOU WENT TO NASSCAR TO EAT. SIMPLE WAFFEL WAS HARD AND COLD. I WOULDN"T EAT IT. I AND MY FAMILY HATED TO EAT OUT WHEN PEOPLE STAY AT A HOTEL THEY JUST STAY AT THE HOTEL. THERE WAS NO OTHER PLACE TO EAT IN THE HOTEL WHEN THEY CLOSED THE BUFFEE.THE STEAKHOUSE THEY CHARGE YOU $ 100.00 FOR TWO AND YOU COULDN"T EAT IT YOU ARE NOU GOING BACK..PEOPLE DON"T WANT COLD FOOD EITHER. THANKS AGAIN . WE CAN"T WAIT UNTIL THE SAHARA REOPENS AGAIN.
They should have left Wet & Wild next door. It would be the only place making money in Vegas.
Be worth the trouble only if the casinos increase in antique values like the 56 T-BIRDS, `65 MSUTANGS, `56-7 CHEVYS but can`t see anyone driving down the strip in an antiquated SAHARA,too many trailing bed bugs.
Hope they plan to fumigate the bed bugs....... The Sahara was crawling with them!
This will help local joints Aztec to the north and Eureka to the east. Let Sam build a califabulous froofroo hut for the millionaire prius jetset. If you been craving a dustfree outdoor organic beergarden bubble staffed by snarky hazmat suit wearing abstinent vegans this is it. Hurry, there's already a 9 month waiting list for a chance to savor $50 a glass triplefiltered artesian microbrews within a 5 michelin star biodregadable leed certified green taverndome.
Come on now, this was planned all along before it even closed. To eliminate all union employees, all long time employees that got a month vacation, and now are free to hire all the "other kind" to fill those positions at next to nothing!
Jiminredstate, Paradise does not cross the strip so why try to make it go under it? I am glad to see they are not blowing this property up. To many here try to tell others how to run their properties and how to spend their money. I wish them luck, this is more construction jobs and then 1000 jobs when they open.
Melissa.Ridger - Are you stupid or you just dont think. "REMODEL" means to change/improve the Sahara, ala spruce up, make more attractive.
As long as they're at it, why not construct Paradise to go under the Strip like they did with DI, and have the new Sahara Hotel & Casino include that blacked out property on the north side of Paradise? Go big, it's Vegas!