Boardwalk
Closing to Clear Way for CityCenter
Without revealing a specific
date, MGM Mirage expects to close its aging
Boardwalk hotel and casino within a year to
make way for Project CityCenter, the company's
$5 billion casino resort, hotel and condominium
complex on the Strip and the largest privately
funded construction project in U.S. history.
MGM Mirage has already begun to help
its estimated 600 Boardwalk employees look for
jobs elsewhere at the company, said Bobby Baldwin,
president and chief executive of the company's
Mirage Resorts division, which is overseeing
the development of CityCenter.
"We think these people will have continuous
employment," he said.
MGM Mirage began construction on a parking
garage for employees at the nearby Bellagio
property who have been parking on a surface
lot behind the Boardwalk. The 5,300-car garage
will be complete in June and will clear the
way for the company to begin work that month
on the centerpiece of the 66-acre urban village
-- a 4,000-room hotel and casino.
The first phase of CityCenter, which will open
around November 2009, will also include two
400-room, boutique hotels, about 500,000 square
feet of retail, dining and entertainment venues
and 1,640 units of luxury condominiums.
MGM Mirage has hired Taubman Centers Inc.,
a Michigan-based real estate developer and investor,
to help attract tenants for the more than 70
storefront cafes, bars, art galleries, jazz
clubs and other venues MGM Mirage envisions.
Some of the condos would be loft-like units
above the storefronts.
The second phase of the project would include
2,600 condo units across five towers, built
across the rear of the property and closest
to Interstate 15.
MGM Mirage is finalizing a management agreement
with Mandarin Oriental to run one of the hotels,
which would feature about 500 residential units.
The Light Group, which created the Light and
Caramel nightclubs at Bellagio, will operate
the other boutique hotel.
Mandarin Oriental has a flagship hotel in Hong
Kong and operates about 30 luxury hotels in
Asia, Europe and the United States.
Mandarin is a "preeminent" hotel
brand that is well-known in Asia and Europe,
Deutsche Bank stock analyst Marc Falcone said.
The five-star CityCenter hotel would be the
top of its league in Las Vegas and on a par
with the Four Seasons hotel at Mandalay Bay,
he said.
Light Group owner Andrew Sasson has never operated
a hotel before. Sasson's first restaurant, Fix,
opened last year. And he is building his first
high-rise condominium project with other investors,
Panorama Towers, across I-15 from the Strip.
"I love a challenge," said Sasson,
who was selected out of a host of worldwide
hotel operators.
Sasson has partnered with MGM Mirage on most
of his Las Vegas developments. He said he will
once again have the creative freedom to pursue
something different.
"People know me as the nightclub guy,"
he said. "But this is not going to be a
nightclub dropped down in a hotel. It's going
to have a very different look, design and theme
... that's unique to the United States. We don't
want to be the Hard Rock or the Palms."
Gregg Jones, associate principal with Cesar
Pelli & Associates, will be helping to design
the 4,000-room hotel and casino building. The
Connecticut company participated in a 60-day
"brainstorm competition" with MGM
Mirage earlier this year.
"(Bobby) Baldwin was very open" to
new ideas, Jones said. "He pushed us. He
said, 'What else can you do? We'd like to do
something new, something different.' "
"It was informal and interactive,"
he said. "We didn't take anything for granted.
In the first month we dissected just about every
kind of hotel on the planet."
The CityCenter concept is the result of months
of pre-planning with urban planning firm Ehrenkrantz
Eckstut & Kuhn Architects, a global firm
that has redesigned urban areas. The company
is in month nine of a 20-month design process.
"We don't want to build things consumers
want now. We want to build what they will want
10, 15, 50 years from now," Baldwin said.
Thursday, MGM Mirage unveiled a list of top-tier
architects who will be working on CityCenter
-- further evidence of the company's plan to
not only create Las Vegas' first major "live
and work" environment but to influence
contemporary urban design.
Envisioned as a self-sustaining "vertical
city," CityCenter "reaffirms the growing
sophistication and maturity of Las Vegas and
sets a benchmark for new growth," MGM Mirage
Chief Executive Terry Lanni said.
The executive architect is Gensler, the world's
largest architecture firm and the designer of
the Moscone West convention center in San Francisco
and the JetBlue airline terminal at the John
F. Kennedy International Airport in New York.
Rafael Vinoly Architects designed a new performance
hall at Lincoln Center in New York City and
convention centers in Boston and Pittsburgh.
James KM Cheng Architects, designers of multiple
high-rises in Vancouver, British Columbia, will
craft a 100-unit residential tower with a twisting
design.
Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates will design the
exterior architecture for the Mandarin Oriental
hotel, the gateway to CityCenter on the Strip.
The company has designed several major hotels,
including the Mohegan Sun casino and many branded
properties such as the Four Seasons, Conrad
and Hyatt.
Foster and Partners will design the exterior
of the Light Group-managed hotel. The company
designed the Beijing International Airport,
the new German Parliament in Berlin and a wing
of the British Museum. Chief architect Sir Norman
Foster is a Pritzker prize winner, the highest
honor in the field of architecture.
"I think it would be an understatement
to say this project is an architect's dream,"
Gensler Chairman Art Gensler said.
Gensler said CityCenter will "add to Las
Vegas' impact on the world" by creating
a complete urban environment from scratch.
Ronette Riley, a New York City-based architect
and chair of the American Institute of Architects'
design committee, said CityCenter has an "exciting"
design that will be crafted by an "excellent"
roster of architects at the top of their game.
"It's everything I think is missing from
Las Vegas," said Riley, who is not involved
with CityCenter and did not bid on the project.
"It's modern and they're using quality
materials. It's not setting up some Disneyland-like
theme like fake Venice and fake New York."
But Riley is less certain about MGM Mirage's
lofty goal of transforming Las Vegas to a major
urban center.
"For all the positives Las Vegas has,
it's missing in the arts," she said.
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