Las Vegas Review-Journal

Developer acquires Symphony Park parcel

Las Vegas City Council gets $4.25 million for plot

- By Jamie Munks Las Vegas Review-journal

Las Vegas will sell a five-acre parcel in the city-owned downtown Symphony Park for $4.25 million to SLC Developmen­t, Inc.

The Nashville-based company wants to build more than 300 residentia­l apartments and 20,000 square feet of retail space across from the Smith Center for the Performing Arts.

“We believe this is the next great neighborho­od downtown,” city Economic and Urban Developmen­t Director Bill Arent said.

Officials’ high hopes for housing in Symphony Park — which the city has been marketing for redevelopm­ent — were thwarted by the recession, and the empty parcels have been slow to fill in. Officials have been saying for well over a year they were confident housing would soon come into Symphony Park.

The city will pay up to roughly $2.8 million for environmen­tal remediatio­n. City officials forecast the project will create 174 permanent jobs and annual sales tax revenue of $443,500. A timeline Arent calls “aggressive but achievable” calls for the developer to close on the sale in April, start constructi­on in February 2019 and finish in early July 2020.

The agreement approved Wednesday prevents the company from flipping the land without developing it.

Councilman Bob Coffin cast the lone “no” vote to sell the land because it had been appraised at

$6.2 million and at more than

$20 million.

“I cannot support a sale in this sweet spot of town so much below value,” Coffin said.

The possibilit­y for selling the land to a commercial developer, which can often pay much more than a residentia­l developer for land, factored into the appraisal of more than $20 million, Arent said.

PARCEL

Councilman Steve Seroka saw it differentl­y.

“We’re getting $4 million for land no one has wanted to build on for 25 years,” Seroka said.

The city’s charter allows for a land sale below fair market value if the council deems it in the city’s best interest.

Renderings showed to the council Wednesday had three stories of housing stacked on top of a retail ground floor, all wrapped around concealed parking at the center of the building. The building design isn’t finalized, and the Planning Commission and City Council will be able to weigh in on the design.

“The developer before us is the right developer,” said Councilman Ricki Barlow, whose Ward 5 includes Symphony Park.

Ken Howell, of SLC Developmen­t, said the company will soon break ground on residentia­l towers in Philadelph­ia, Dallas and Denver. The company has been eyeing Las Vegas for nearly two years.

Symphony Park is currently home to the Smith Center for the Performing Arts, the Cleveland Clinic Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health and the Discovery Children’s Museum.

Contact Jamie Munks at jmunks@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0340. Follow @Jamiemunks­rj on Twitter.

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