Las Vegas Review-Journal

AEG: Stadium will hit event quota

Concerts, collegiate championsh­ips on table

- By Mick Akers Las Vegas Review-journal

Ever since the initial planning phase, when it was said the Las Vegas Stadium could host 46 events annually, that number has been met with skepticism.

But AEG Worldwide, the events company tasked with filling the $1.9 billion, 65,000-seat domed stadium with events, said Thursday it is confident it will be able to meet that quota.

Raiders and UNLV home football games will account for 16 events per year, leaving 30 other events to be scheduled at the stadium each year.

“This is a very special market,” Chris Wright, facilities regional vice president at AEG, said at Thursday’s Las Vegas Stadium Authority board meeting. “There’s a lot of interest. When you look at event planning and the number of folks who are looking to get into the market, I feel very confident about that number.”

The destinatio­n and the state-of-the-art stadium are a perfect pair to draw acts that have historical­ly skipped Las Vegas due to the lack of an adequate venue, he said.

Wright has been working with groups to gauge interest in being the first musical act to perform at the stadium. He said they’ll have a good idea of what the first year of events will look like early next year.

“Everyone is excited. I regularly speak with touring managers, touring entities and large concert promoters in the market, and they’re very excited to have an opportunit­y to come to the entertainm­ent capital of the world in a brand new stadium,” he said. “We should be a regular touring destinatio­n for most artists on the stadium level.”

Aside from big-name entertaine­rs, other options include large-scale sporting events.

“There’s a number of college events that we’re looking at, and we’ll be very active in the college sports market and the alternativ­e sports markets,” Wright said. “We’ll be looking to do a number of combat sports, in addition to some of the monster truck and entertainm­ent type of events.”

This month the NCAA men’s basketball committee and NCAA staff were given a tour of the stadium, according to a tweet posted by the stadium’s verified Twitter account. The committee is tasked, among other things, with selecting the venue for the men’s Final Four.

A wide variety of events have already shown interest in coming to Las Vegas, Wright said, and he is confident they’ll live up to stadium executives’ expectatio­ns.

“When you look at the amount of programmin­g, the different types of programmin­g that we’re already engaged with, hitting that number doesn’t seem to be difficult at all,” he said.

Constructi­on update

The stadium constructi­on process is past the halfway point; steel work is expected to be topped off next month.

The authority approved $40 million of additions Thursday, raising the stadium budget to $1.9 billion. The additions include 20 more suites and a field-level club area in the north end zone. They are being paid for by personal seat license and club seat sales that weren’t factored into the original budget.

So far, $944.7 million has been spent on the stadium project, including $340 million generated by a 0.88 percent lodging tax on Clark County hotel rooms. That amount cannot exceed $750 million.

The final three of the 26 steel canopy trusses are being assembled and are expected to be installed in the next few weeks. After infill steel is put into place, the major steel work will be complete, said Don Webb, chief operating officer of Las Vegas Stadium Events Co. He said a delay in steel delivery and manufactur­ing in the spring necessitat­ed additional work shifts on top of the double shifts that have been occurring almost since the project began.

“What we’re talking about now is intensifyi­ng the schedule with some nights shifts and more heavily worked weekends in order to overcome the delays that we’ve had in the fabricatio­n and erection of steel,” Webb said. “That will continue probably through the month of August.”

After the steel is topped off, the next big task is installing the cable steel roofing system that will support the translucen­t roof, he said. That will take place in September and October and will take six to eight weeks, he said.

“That’s such a large-scale operation, it virtually takes over the entire bowl of the stadium,” Webb said. “That pretty well restricts what can be taking place while that’s occurring. That’s a matter of safety. We’ve got a hundred cables overhead, and we don’t want to have anything happen overhead that can impact people below.”

Contact Mick Akers at makers@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-2920. Follow @mickakers on Twitter.

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