Las Vegas Review-Journal

LV redevelopm­ent agency OKS downtown expo center

- By Jamie Munks Las Vegas Review-journal

Plans for a 350,000-square-foot expo and convention center in downtown Las Vegas got a push forward Wednesday with an endorsemen­t from the city’s redevelopm­ent agency.

The city would contribute $30 million in tax increment financing toward the $76 million project planned for the World Market Center campus along Grand Central Parkway.

“This is the best news we’ve had in seven years,” Las Vegas Mayor Carolyn Goodman said after a unanimous vote by the redevelopm­ent agency, which has the same members as the City Council.

Councilman-elect Cedric Crear, who will represent the part of the city where the project is planned after he is sworn in on April 18, asked his soon-to-be colleagues Wednesday morning to hold off on voting so he has a chance to ask questions and get up to speed on the plans.

“Time is of the essence,” Councilman Bob Coffin said, before making a motion to approve the nonbinding term sheet that lays out the plans.

The City Council will take a future vote on a formal agreement and the tax increment financing plan.

Internatio­nal Market Centers chief executive Bob Maracich said the company has been advised to “put the gas pedal to the floor” by constructi­on industry experts because of the likelihood of steel tariffs and competitio­n for labor locally with other large-scale projects.

The goal is for an expedited constructi­on timeline and the center

EXPO CENTER

opening in summer 2020, Maracich said.

The tax increment financing plan would divert up to $30 million in future taxes generated by the convention center project to go back to the developer.

If the expo center flounders because of “something unforeseea­ble like another double-dip recession,” the city’s redevelopm­ent agency would be on the hook for less money, no more than 82 percent of what the project generates, Economic and Urban Developmen­t Director Bill Arent said.

When the Cashman Center exposition facilities closed at the end of 2017, it left a total of 106,719 square feet of convention space in downtown Las Vegas, spread across 10 different resorts. At 31,000 square feet, the Golden Nugget is the largest.

The shows at the center would be mostly multi-day trade shows and convention­s that attract groups from outside the region, with a push for national and regional shows that supplement the home decor shows World Market Center hosts. A minimum number of days will be set aside for community events.

Applied Analysis forecasts the expo center would directly create 429 jobs and an annual 161,677 room nights and $97 million in spending annually.

The term sheet approved Wednesday calls for the developer to pay prevailing wage rates and follow the city redevelopm­ent agency employment plan, which has benchmarks for local and diversity hiring.

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

 ?? Bizuayehu Tesfaye ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @bizutesfay­e The World Market Center campus along Grand Central Parkway in downtown Las Vegas might gain a 350,000-square-foot expo and convention center.
Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-journal @bizutesfay­e The World Market Center campus along Grand Central Parkway in downtown Las Vegas might gain a 350,000-square-foot expo and convention center.

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