CityCenter: The End of Las Vegas

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The largest commercial project in history is for leisure & entertainment, but not not manufacturing and health care. The banks must be out-of-their-minds.

Las Vegas is going to wish it could be a Detroit when this fails.

CityCenter Las Vegas

The $9 billion development named CityCenter was conceived as the centerpiece of a thriving Las Vegas -- one of the world's most expensive building projects that would bring back glamour to the Strip and cap an unprecedented three-year economic boom. But in order to complete the project, millions more are needed to access a $1.8 billion credit facility.

The construction site of the CityCenter project in Las Vegas, Nevada

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But trouble is brewing beneath the surface. In March, Dubai World, the development arm of the United Arab Emirates, sued MGM Mirage, claiming mismanagement and wanting out of further financial commitments. The U.S. company hired bankruptcy counsel, setting off alarms about solvency. And the company was forced to inject an emergency $200 million to keep construction going.

"The events of the last six months have been our Pearl Harbor, economically,“ said Bill Thompson, gaming expert and professor of public administration at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. "CityCenter might be too big to fail. If it opens, it's a dramatic gesture that says we're winning, we're not defeated, we're on the way back.“

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"If it fails, it would be like a second Pearl Harbor.“

It's City Center, or Bust
The few operating cranes in town are scattered among the 9,500 construction workers still crawling over CityCenter, an $8.4 billion, five-skyscraper, ultra-luxury project that is the largest privately financed development ever in the U.S. Although the company has managed to keep the project going through a desperate battle for financing deals with Dubai World, a number of people who signed up for condominiums are looking to bail. So MGM Mirage, which owns the most properties on Las Vegas Boulevard — the Strip — ducked and weaved around bankruptcy for six months earlier this year by pumping $140 million, almost a quarter of its monthly revenues, into the project. MGM sold off Treasure Island at a bargain price: Phil Ruffin, the buyer, paid the equivalent of $225,000 for each room on the property; CityCenter's rooms cost about $1.5 million each to build. Even if CityCenter is a big success and people want urban density as a part of their Vegas experience, experts like Bill Lerner, a gaming analyst at Union Gaming Group, figure it will be five to 10 years before Vegas needs more than the 150,000 or so hotel rooms it will have when CityCenter's 6,000 and the Cosmopolitan's 800 are completed. And if CityCenter tanks, Vegas will be holding some very bad cards.

It now needs $800 million more to access a $1.8 billion credit facility to let it complete the project, but funding prospects look bleak in a global recession.

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You need a helicopter to get a view--and an understanding of--Las Vegas's CityCenter, that shiny architectural jambalaya opening this month. There are six properties, but the anchor of the $8.5 billion project is #2 on the map aka the Aria Resort & Casino. You can't buy a condo in that building, but you can purchase a condo in three other buildings. Meanwhile, with all the hotel rooms and condos coming on the market, some news outlets are betting that the MGM Mirage/Dubai World-funded CityCenter "will make or break Las Vegas." Such pressure. Who'd want to be responsible for breaking Vegas. After the jump, an explanation of each building.
 
Yeah, it looks amazing.

They just built this monument to a world that will never be.

Enjoy it because what good days it has will only be in the beginning.
 
I had no idea they were building this...I was just there a few years ago. DAMN, that sh!t is HUGE!
 
They said the same thing to Bugsy Siegel about Vegas to begin with. Only

time will tell I guess.

I was thinking about this.

To me, it is the perfect bookend.

The Flamingo started as a disaster but became a success.

But, this CityCenter thing, it will start as a disaster and end as a disaster.

The start of an era and the end of an era.

If you think Detroit, St. Louis, Baltimore, Cleveland are bad... just watch Las Vegas in the coming years.

People won't have the savings and income like in the 2000s. And, to make things worse, CityCenter was built assuming leisure dollars would go UP (not stay the same, let alone drop) in the next decade.

People are going to be bailing out of that city like its nobody's business.

So, enjoy it while it lasts.

CityCenter is obsolete the moment it opens.
 
It won't fail. What it will do is equalize and lower hotel room prices in the other high-end hotels. The fact that there's no gambling on some or all of the premise should give most an idea that they're not relying on their most-famous cash-cow.
 
I think it will be ok but it probably won't be the speedy start other properties have had in the past. This place is all about opulence. They had the grand opening the other night and I could hear the fireworks from my house.

-VG
 
The thing hat could save this is drastic monetary change, I don't think thats coming soon enough.:dunno:
 
That place will be fine for this reason:

Americans love things that big, shiny, and new

theyll flock to the place and spend every dime they have

Vegas will be fine

comparing that cashcow to michigan is ridiculous
 
That place will be fine for this reason:

Americans love things that big, shiny, and new

theyll flock to the place and spend every dime they have

Vegas will be fine

comparing that cashcow to michigan is ridiculous

People wanted gas guzzling SUVs, GM and Chrysler go bankrupt.

People wanted luxury homes, the financial system collapses.

People wanted cheap gas, prices hit $4.

People wanted easy credit, the banks cancel credit lines.

Just because people want it, doesn't mean they will get it.

Welcome to the world of living within your means. And Las Vegas isn't it.

If Wall Street and Dubai can collapse, I don't know why you think Las Vegas is so special.
 
People wanted gas guzzling SUVs, GM and Chrysler go bankrupt.

People wanted luxury homes, the financial system collapses.

People wanted cheap gas, prices hit $4.

People wanted easy credit, the banks cancel credit lines.

Just because people want it, doesn't mean they will get it.

Welcome to the world of living within your means. And Las Vegas isn't it.

If Wall Street and Dubai can collapse, I don't know why you think Las Vegas is so special.

theres a big difference

vegas is a tourist destination

a place to escape all the bullshit you mentioned above

no one goes there to live within there means....they try hard to surpass it

people save for years to have the ability to blow it all in vegas

and that isnt changing anytime soon
 
The thing hat could save this is drastic monetary change, I don't think thats coming soon enough.:dunno:

The Amero is coming, don't worry them mexicans u had doing your roofing for 500 bucks will go back to their country or better they gonna charge u 1200 now. Their buying power will be the same as yours :lol:
 
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