Santa Fe New Mexican

What’s happening in Vegas? Reinventio­n

More than $5 billion worth of constructi­on investment is transformi­ng ‘Sin City’

- By Nikki Ekstein and Kate Krader

The Las Vegas you know and love (or hate) is in the midst of a reinventio­n. More than $5 billion worth of constructi­on investment has poured into Nevada’s “Sin City” recently — resulting in such flashy ribbon-cuttings as the $375 million T-Mobile Arena (home venue to the Vegas Golden Knights, an NHL team that just advanced to the conference finals in its first season) and plans for an NFL team (born the Oakland Raiders) to play in a glitzy, new $2 billion stadium.

That’s just sports. The convention center, which gets flooded with internatio­nal visitors for conference­s, from the Consumer Electronic­s Show to the Roller Skating Industry Convention, is being overhauled and expanded at a cost of $1.4 billion, and hotel mainstays, from the Palms to Caesars, are getting nine-figure renovation­s.

It’s a boom unlike any the city has seen in almost 30 years.

“The 1990s were when we came out with the marketing campaign, ‘What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas,’ ” said Rossi Ralenkotte­r, chief executive officer of the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority. “Internatio­nal trade shows were starting to come into town. Las Vegas was just becoming an exciting place.”

It was the only real boom since the city came of age in the late 1970s. “That was when Steve Wynn built the Mirage and all those resorts came in. The legalizati­on of the gaming scene in Atlantic City made us wonder what we needed to do to compete,” Ralenkotte­r said.

Now the city is due for another marketing makeover. Following the Oct. 1 mass shooting that left 58 concertgoe­rs dead, the city has experience­d a tourism slump of 4.2 percent.

Luckily for all who bet big on Sin City, the current growth should do more than keep Vegas relevant. Look no further than the $550 million revamp of the Monte Carlo, which officially becomes the Park MGM this week. The new hotel — the result of a four-year collaborat­ion between MGM CEO Jim Murren and hotel luminary Andrew Zobler (whose hotels include Manhattan’s NoMad and L.A.’s the Line) — is poised to be Vegas’ new entertainm­ent and dining hub.

Among its draws are 2,604 glamorous rooms, three intimate pools inspired by the French Riviera, the sixth American outpost of Eataly, and more than a dozen restaurant­s by a who’s who of influentia­l chefs. The unremarkab­le thoroughfa­re that leads from the old Monte Carlo to T-Mobile Arena —itself a joint venture between MGM Resorts Internatio­nal and Anschutz Entertainm­ent Group — has become the new jewel in Murren’s crown. He’s calling it “The Park,” and it’s the outdoor equivalent of City Center, the architectu­ral marvel filled with high-end shops that almost bankrupted MGM in 2009. This time, the complex includes the 20,000 seat arena, a theater next door, an urban park, a 40-foot statue of a dancing woman (near an 18,000-square-foot nightclub), and a full suite of fast-casual restaurant­s, including Shake Shack.

The Park MGM — whose top floors will house a separate NoMad hotel — will anchor the complex, turning the sad Monte Carlo into the strip’s gleaming new flagship. It’ll steal attention from MGM’s highest-end hotel, the Bellagio, as well as the most recent hotel to bring such buzz to Vegas: the 8-year-old Cosmopolit­an.

The design of the common areas is inspired by 18th-century English gardens. Restaurant­s are broken into small rooms, rather than overwhelmi­ngly large spaces. And instead of having one giant pool with a DJ, there are three more intimate places to swim — all surrounded by date palms, olive trees and mintgreen cabanas. The rooms aren’t blingy; they feel residentia­l, with settees in window nooks, separate sleeping and sitting areas, and more than a dozen pieces of art apiece. By bringing the outdoors in — and importing the type of high-touch service that characteri­zes Sydell Group’s hotels, from New York’s NoMad to the Ned, in London — Zobler intends to create a boutiqueli­ke, all-day destinatio­n unlike anything else on the Strip.

There will still be two casinos, a high-roller suite and conference center on the property, plus a 5,200 seat theater that’s already booked shows presenting Cher and Lady Gaga.

The Park MGM’s food and beverage lineup largely comprises Sin City first timers. Roy Choi, creator of Los Angeles’ Kogi BBQ , is another Vegas newcomer. (His restaurant, Best Friend, will open here in the fall.) “Locals always stayed off the strip,” he said. “Now, with the arena right on the strip, it’s blurring the lines. It’s feeling like a fully evolved city.”

 ?? ISAAC BREKKEN/NEW YORK TIMES ?? The emergent Golden Knights of the National Hockey League are symbolic of the new face of Las Vegas, Nev. The first-year team, which is making a deep run in the current playoffs, plays at the new $375 million T-Mobile Arena.
ISAAC BREKKEN/NEW YORK TIMES The emergent Golden Knights of the National Hockey League are symbolic of the new face of Las Vegas, Nev. The first-year team, which is making a deep run in the current playoffs, plays at the new $375 million T-Mobile Arena.

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