Elsewhere, too, recession pushed ÔpauseÕ
Las Vegas Sun | 289 days ago
Of all the buildings under construction nationwide left unfinished because of the recession, the Fontainebleau Las Vegas resort, which analysts say may be nationÕs largest and most expensive stalled construction job, might be the poster child for badly timed development.
Fontainebleau is a giant among other unfinished projects in town. Those include Boyd GamingÕs shelved Echelon resort on the Strip and WyndhamÕs 19-story Desert Blue time-share building across from the Rio. Unlike Fontainebleau, where workers had finished the exterior and were installing room furnishings in lower floors when work halted this summer, both of these buildings were little more than steel and concrete skeletons when construction halted in August 2008 and February, respectively.
But for all of its new or recent hotel and condominium inventory, Las Vegas isnÕt nearly as bad off as South Florida. Nearly all Miami-area condo towers were completed before the economy worsened, but the high-rise boom and bust has left several vacant or near-vacant buildings in its wake.
A few buildings were never built past their foundations, and three Miami-area high-rises — two condo towers with more than 300 units and the second and third towers of a 1,644-unit complex — will be among the last to open in the recession, with lingering questions about how they will be filled.
ÒIf these developers had been one year behind schedule thereÕd be many more empty buildings,Ó Miami broker Samir Patel said.
Elsewhere nationwide, many buildings had the relative advantage of never getting off the ground, not being as far along or already being finished when the bottom fell out of the market.
The only other major casino resort awaiting financing to finish construction — Revel, in Atlantic City — is not in as dire straits as Fontainebleau. Work is continuing on the $2 billion project, though interior work was halted to focus on finishing off the resortÕs exterior. Revel, privately financed by Morgan Stanley, wonÕt be opening next year as planned, though owners hope it will open in 2011 with two towers of 1,900 rooms each. The future of Fontainebleau Las Vegas is more uncertain after lenders refused to lend more than $600 million in prearranged financing, throwing the building into bankruptcy. Developers estimate the 63-story Fontainebleau may cost another $1.5 billion to complete on top of the roughly $2 billion already put into the resort.
Several stalled projects elsewhere are remodeling jobs involving existing structures.
Those include the Connell Building in Scranton, Pa., an office building thatÕs being transformed into a residential building with office and retail space, and the original FileneÕs Basement in downtown Boston, which has been closed since 2007 after plans to build a high-rise there stalled.
Others are smaller-scale, mixed-use developments where some buildings were completed and others werenÕt. A bank recently agreed to forgive millions in debt on Virginia housing development Belmont Bay and will foreclose on the project, including partially completed condo units.
Though Las Vegas may not lead in unfinished buildings, it tops the nation in major commercial projects that never got past the financing stage before the recession came along. But thatÕs nothing new: Las Vegas has long attracted speculators with big dreams, little experience and enough millions to secure some land on deposit and develop plans, only for them to evaporate for lack of financing.
During the past real estate boom, multi-billion-dollar resort concepts that were eventually shelved came from bona fide developers with real money. They include Elad, owner of New YorkÕs historic Plaza hotel, which spent $1.2 billion acquiring the site of the imploded New Frontier for a Plaza-themed resort, and James Packer, who has lost millions betting on future growth in Vegas, including a stake in Fontainebleau and the proposed Crown Las Vegas resort.
Fontainebleau secured a $4 billion financing package in June 2007, months after bad mortgages had begun imploding the balance sheets of Wall Street investment banks but well before the mortgage crisis helped take down the economy. In retrospect, the giant buildings for which Las Vegas is known take several years to build — time enough for the economy to turn.
Timing, so the saying goes, is everything.
Liz Benston can be reached at 259-4077 or at benston@lasvegassun.com.

Copyright 2009  Las Vegas Sun
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