Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Vegas Update

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Vegas Update

    LAS VEGAS — There are many cities across the country that are beginning to see the first glimpses of the end of the recession.

    This is not one of them.


    The nation’s gambling capital is staggering under a confluence of economic forces that has sent Las Vegas into what officials describe as its deepest economic rut since casinos first began rising in the desert here in the 1940s.

    Even as city leaders remain hopeful that gambling revenues will rebound with the nation’s economy, experts project that it will not be enough to make up for an even deeper realignment that has taken place in the course of this recession: the collapse of the construction industry, which was the other economic pillar of the city and the state.

    Unemployment in Nevada is now 14.4 percent, the highest in the nation and a stark contrast to the 3.8 percent unemployment rate here just 10 years ago; in Las Vegas, it is 14.7 percent.

    August was the 44th consecutive month in which Nevada led the nation in housing foreclosures.

    The Plaza Hotel and Casino, which is downtown, recently announced that it was laying off 400 workers and closing its hotel and parts of its casino for eventual renovation, the latest high-profile hit to a city that has seen a steady parade of them.

    “It’s been in bad shape before, but not this bad,” said David G. Schwartz, director of the Center for Gaming Research at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. “If you look at the gaming revenues, they have declined and continue to decline over the past three years. “

    “Sept. 11 set off a two-year slowdown,” Mr. Schwartz said. “But nothing of this magnitude.”



    “Our daily room rate average is not what it was. Our hotel room rates are bargains now. People aren’t spending on gambling as they have in the past. Ordinarily Las Vegas was the last to go into a recession and the first to come out. This one is different." Mayor Oscar B. Goodman


    “The big players, the ones who gamble the big money, I’m not sure they have it anymore,” Mr. Goodman said.

    And in the midst of all of this, standing as a prime symbol of Las Vegas’s taste for extravagant risk — or perhaps of a fateful misreading of a changing landscape — is a huge new “urban community” called CityCenter, which opened next to the Bellagio on the Strip.





    Built by MGM Resorts and the government of Dubai, CityCenter is the largest privately financed construction project in United States history. It is an $8.5 billion labyrinth of hotels, casinos, retail malls, meeting rooms, auditoriums and spas spread across 76 acres with 16 million square feet of floor space. Steel and glass, a crush of buildings often rising at discordant angles, it is an arresting display of a new style of architecture and urban planning that has not been seen in Las Vegas before.

    CityCenter was conceived before the economic downturn and did not open until last December, an unfortunate turn of timing that dropped 5,000 new hotel rooms into the city when some of the older properties had been struggling to bring people in. Another 2,500 rooms are due to be added when another new hotel and casino on the Strip, the Cosmopolitan, opens in mid-December. (A recent check online found rooms being offered for as little as $38 a night at the Sahara Hotel and Casino.)

    Billy Vassiliadis, the chief executive of the advertising agency that represents the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, said, “People are looking at mall visits and online shopping and saying, ‘Yeah, that could be a problem.’ ”

    “Am I worried?” Mr. Vassiliadis continued. “Hey, listen, I wish we could go all the way back to before Atlantic City opened. By my nature, I like monopolies as long as they are my clients.”

    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/03/us...s.html?_r=1&hp

  • #2
    Re: Vegas Update

    Originally posted by don View Post
    ...Built by MGM Resorts and the government of Dubai, CityCenter is the largest privately financed construction project in United States history...
    That's the problem with living in The Magic Kingdom...do it long enough and, just like the Government of Dubai [and no small number of Dubai's former residents], you start to think Disneyland is the real world. That Dubai would want to invest in Las Vegas of all places, compared to anywhere else in the USA, makes perfect sense when put in that context.

    Rule number one in the promotion game...never, ever start to believe your own bullshzt.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Vegas Update

      Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
      That's the problem with living in The Magic Kingdom...do it long enough and, just like the Government of Dubai [and no small number of Dubai's former residents], you start to think Disneyland is the real world. That Dubai would want to invest in Las Vegas of all places, compared to anywhere else in the USA, makes perfect sense when put in that context.

      Rule number one in the promotion game...never, ever start to believe your own bullshzt.
      Similar to the phrase drug dealers repeat "don't get high on your own supply"

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Vegas Update

        Yea, but the Magic Kingdom is more fun then reality.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Vegas Update

          I am beginning to think this "CityCenter" brand is owned by someone in the UAE... There is a behemoth of a shopping center in Nasr City (a suburb of Cairo) called "CityCenter"; it is f'ing huge and packed to the brim with folks, about 4 city blocks by 4 city blocks... Stores, movies, living space, etc.. Around that mall takes 1/2 an hour to move 2 blocks....

          If you think LA traffic jams are bad, you ain't seen nothi'n!

          It sounds like they are trying to build that brand out around the world.. Sort of like Westfield malls in the US.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Vegas Update

            Originally posted by BigBagel View Post
            Yea, but the Magic Kingdom is more fun then reality.
            So was Dubai in it's heyday.

            And as the heads of the various government owned companies lost their grip on reality the pronouncements coming from their mouths were every bit as humorous as what we have come to expect from Goofy and Mickey. One example: Late in bubble the CEO of one of Dubai's largest [state-owned, of course] property development companies, while part of an official delegation to China, suggested that the Chinese should contract out all their urban planning and development as "Dubai could do a better job"of it.

            By that time Dubai had already become completely unlivable for any sane person...but it was still a great place to visit to play...
            Last edited by GRG55; October 04, 2010, 02:37 AM.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Vegas Update

              Originally posted by karim0028 View Post
              I am beginning to think this "CityCenter" brand is owned by someone in the UAE... There is a behemoth of a shopping center in Nasr City (a suburb of Cairo) called "CityCenter"; it is f'ing huge and packed to the brim with folks, about 4 city blocks by 4 city blocks... Stores, movies, living space, etc.. Around that mall takes 1/2 an hour to move 2 blocks....

              If you think LA traffic jams are bad, you ain't seen nothi'n!

              It sounds like they are trying to build that brand out around the world.. Sort of like Westfield malls in the US.
              You are correct. "City Centre" is a mall franchise branding from the Majid Al Futtaim Group in Dubai, UAE. They built the first "mega-mall" using that name in Deira, UAE, and have since built a series of huge malls, most of them branded "City Centre" in the Gulf [Sharjah, Ajman, Oman and Bahrain...not far from where I am typing this up at the moment] and North Africa [Maadi in Cairo, and Alexandria]. They built and operate the Mall of the Emirates in Dubai, which contains the infamous indoor ski hill.

              However, my recollection is that the giant mall in Nasr City is called "City Stars" and was developed by an Egyptian company, GPP, which is headquartered there. When I was travelling to Cairo frequently I often stayed at the Intercontinental at City Stars in Nasr City because it was one of the cleaner and newer hotels in Cairo, so I've wandered around the massive adjacent mall, and got lost in there a few times.

              I used to think that the Middle East was "over-retailed". Until I made my first trip to Hong Kong, last week. That place sets a whole new standard for "retail density"...it's basically one giant shopping experience near as I could tell. I actually hate shopping. But I emailed a friend of mine who lives in Vancouver, and visits HK frequently, and I confessed that I had broken down and had some dress shirts being tailored. She replied that I needed to liberate the "inner shopper" in me, without which I couldn't really enjoy "the full HK experience". Maybe that's what Obama and Bernanke need to do...figure out how to liberate the inner shopper in every American...
              Last edited by GRG55; October 04, 2010, 03:16 AM.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Vegas Update

                Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
                You are correct. "City Centre" is a mall franchise branding from the Majid Al Futtaim Group in Dubai, UAE. They built the first "mega-mall" using that name in Deira, UAE, and have since built a series of huge malls, most of them branded "City Centre" in the Gulf [Sharjah, Ajman, Oman and Bahrain...not far from where I am typing this up at the moment] and North Africa [Maadi in Cairo, and Alexandria]. They built and operate the Mall of the Emirates in Dubai, which contains the infamous indoor ski hill.

                However, my recollection is that the giant mall in Nasr City is called "City Stars" and was developed by an Egyptian company, GPP, which is headquartered there. When I was travelling to Cairo frequently I often stayed at the Intercontinental at City Stars in Nasr City because it was one of the cleaner and newer hotels in Cairo, so I've wandered around the massive adjacent mall, and got lost in there a few times.

                I used to think that the Middle East was "over-retailed". Until I made my first trip to Hong Kong, last week. That place sets a whole new standard for "retail density"...it's basically one giant shopping experience near as I could tell. I actually hate shopping. But I emailed a friend of mine who lives in Vancouver, and visits HK frequently, and I confessed that I had broken down and had some dress shirts being tailored. She replied that I needed to liberate the "inner shopper" in me, without which I couldn't really enjoy "the full HK experience". Maybe that's what Obama and Bernanke need to do...figure out how to liberate the inner shopper in every American...
                You are right! Its City Stars... It ended up being about 2 blocks from our house... Damn near chocked up the area...

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Vegas Update

                  Our Fall travel plans are set but otherwise a trip to Vegas would be tempting. Cheap, and a portfolio of shots to be taken

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Vegas Update

                    I should be in Vegas early-mid November on business. I'll report back what I hear.

                    Comment

                    Working...
                    X