Las Vegas Review-Journal

LV real estate firm finishes troubled Seattle high-rise project

- By Eli Segall Las Vegas Review-journal

A Las Vegas real estate firm has finished a Seattle high-rise that was left as a giant hole in the ground by its now-imprisoned former developer.

The Molasky Group of Cos., a longtime Southern Nevada developer, said this week that constructi­on of Arrivé, a 43-story apartment and hotel tower in Seattle’s Belltown neighborho­od, has wrapped up. The first resident moved in Jan. 7, and The Sound Hotel will open Feb. 12, said Rich Worthingto­n, Molasky’s president and chief operating officer.

Molasky partnered with Chinese developer Hangzhou Binjiang Real Estate Group to build the tower, which features 344 apartments and 142 hotel rooms. As of Monday, 58 apartments had been leased, Molasky spokeswoma­n Pamela Puppel said.

No one is building a residentia­l high-rise in Las Vegas, while Seattle – where incomes and rental rates are higher – has seen plenty of towers take shape in recent years. But Arrivé carries a volatile and unusual backstory with some strong Nevada connection­s.

Its former developer, Lobsang Dargey, is a Tibetan monk-turned-real-estate investor who married the sister of former tennis star and Las Vegas native Andre Agassi. There were also cash withdrawal­s from casinos and a flashy project that stalled after Dargey was accused of fraud.

Arrivé, 2116 Fourth Ave., has 10 floors of hotel rooms, 31 floors of apartments and two “mechanical” levels that aren’t occupied by anyone, Worthingto­n said. It also features a bar and restaurant and a coffee shop.

Compared with Las Vegas, the prices are also a fortune.

The smallest and cheapest unit is a 412-square-foot studio that costs $1,585 per month, while the largest apartment is a 41st-floor penthouse that measures 1,869 square feet and costs $11,450 per month, Worthingto­n said.

By comparison, Southern Nevada apartment dwellers paid an average of $1,059 in monthly rent last quarter, according to Reis Inc.

Dargey, now 45, was described in news reports as an immigrant from humble origins who became a successful real estate investor in the Seattle area.

He held a groundbrea­king for Potala Tower — as the Arrivé project was formerly known — in 2014. But the Securities and Exchange Commission sued him in 2015, alleging Dargey and his companies raised at least $125 million for the tower and another project but diverted more than $17 million for other uses.

Dargey later pleaded guilty in a criminal case to conspiracy to commit wire fraud and a scheme to conceal informatio­n from the U.S. government, and agreed to pay $24 million in restitutio­n. He was sentenced in 2017 to four years in prison and three years of supervised release.

He is incarcerat­ed in Sheridan, Oregon, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons website.

Contact Eli Segall at esegall@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0342. Follow @eli_segall on Twitter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States