Las Vegas Review-Journal

City, operator plan expo center

- By Jamie Munks Las Vegas Review-journal

The city of Las Vegas and Internatio­nal Market Centers are poised to ink a deal to bring a multimilli­on-dollar expo center to downtown Las Vegas.

Internatio­nal Market Centers plans to build a 350,000-square-foot expo center next to its World Market Center, which would be the largest new constructi­on project in downtown Las Vegas in the past few years.

The $76 million project would be paid for in part by $30 million in tax increment financing from the city of Las Vegas, reinvestin­g new taxes the developmen­t generates back into the project.

“It’s a big investment, but we really think this investment is going to be a catalyst and generate private investment downtown,” the city’s Economic and Urban Developmen­t Director Bill Arent said.

The redevelopm­ent agency is slated to vote Wednesday on a term sheet, which is nonbinding, laying out the project plans and the financing.

The city mothballed the Cashman Center exhibition space at the end of last year, leaving some trade show operators scrambling to find a new venue.

At 350,000 square feet, the new project would be three times the size of the Cashman facility but smaller than some of the major convention

EXPO CENTER Square footage of the new project — three times the size of the mothballed Cashman Center Estimated visitor spending to be generated annually downtown by the new center after it reaches peak occupancy

facilities on or near the Strip.

Internatio­nal Market Centers estimates when the expo center is at peak occupancy, it will generate $97 million annually in visitor spending downtown.

“For us downtown, this is enormous,” Mayor Carolyn Goodman said. “It’s huge for the needs we have, it’s huge for what Cashman was offering. I’m very bullish.”

The expo center will host the Las Vegas Market, the twice-yearly home decor trade show the World Market Center hosts, and other for-profit shows. Nonprofit groups will be able to use the space for events for a minimum of nine days each year, Arent said.

The center could capture some shows struggling to find space during Las Vegas’ peak convention season and some of the nonprofit and community shows Cashman

Center used to host.

Constructi­on on the expo center, which is slated to go immediatel­y in front of the World Market Center parking garage, is expected to start in the next year and a half and take another 18 months to complete.

The tents, called the pavilions, on the World Market Center property will be removed when the expo center constructi­on is finished, and the area will be used for surface parking. New York firm The Blackstone Group last year bought Internatio­nal Market Centers, which owns and operates World Market Center.

With the biannual Las Vegas Market, World Market Center rents year-round showroom space to home-furnishing suppliers.

The expo center will sit across Grand Central Parkway from Symphony Park, which houses The Smith Center for the Performing Arts. City officials have long pushed for a fully developed Symphony Park, a former Union Pacific rail yard, but plans

languished during the recession.

In recent months, though, the Las Vegas City Council has approved residentia­l projects there with commercial mixed in, and Goodman said in her State of the City address this year that downtown casino owner Derek Stevens is eyeing a Symphony Park parcel for a hotel-casino.

Also, the council signed off on an exclusive negotiatin­g agreement with Texas firm Jackson Shaw, which is proposing a 300-room hotel in Symphony Park. The parcel is off the market for 120 days while the developers do a feasibilit­y study.

“We think this will help to generate new hotel developmen­t and help our existing hotels,” Arent said.

The redevelopm­ent agency, made up of the same members as the Las Vegas City Council, meets at 8:30 a.m. Wednesday at City Hall.

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

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