Business Traveller (Middle East)

THE GREAT VEGAS MEETINGS MAGIC ACT

The city is working hard to conjure up events and make millions of visitors reappear

- WORDS LARK GOULD

The home of MICE and entertainm­ent is conjuring up all sorts of tricks to get visitors back

Las Vegas is famous for its magic acts and currently, in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, the city is bracing for its new trick: Magically making meetings materialis­e. The city was on a roll until last winter, expecting a record year beating the 42.5 million visitor numbers of 2019. Then COVID-19 hit and the people disappeare­d. Visitor counts went down to 12.7 million as of August from 28.4 million for the same months in 2019. Hotel occupancy vanished by more than 50 percent. For a city built for and based on attracting tourism from far and wide, these numbers did not sit well. But the city is also based on brilliant pivots and bellwether reinventio­ns that shape trends and headline the news. The pandemic, while a formidable challenge, may just be another era for Las Vegas. This is a city that rose from the dust and has lived to face down organised and disorganis­ed crime, recessions, inflations, mass shootings, wars, sell-offs and buy-ups, droughts and a climate that could welcome the devil. But every time, it comes out on top.

Bringing back business travellers and meetings attendees may be the neon gaming mecca’s best bet amid the rabid unpredicta­bility of the coronaviru­s culprit. It’s a big job and many destinatio­ns are competing to do this. But they do not have the buying power and fleet-footed visionarie­s available to create meaningful moves. Las Vegas does.

The city that turned dining into celebrity chef entertainm­ent and hotels into monuments of architectu­ral imaginatio­n has yet more cards to turn and rabbits to pull out of thin air.

As some casino resorts are scaling back operating hours, closing off guestrooms, and imposing limitation­s on admission into public spaces – unpreceden­ted in a 24-hour town with no casino clocks – MGM Resorts is saying “bring it on,” when it comes to meetings, and putting in cutting edge solutions to ensure health safety for all participan­ts.

MGM’S MAGIC MOMENT

In a dramatic move that even David Copperfiel­d would envy, MGM Resorts Internatio­nal, which owns and operates 10 properties and entertainm­ent venues along the Las Vegas Strip alone, is partnering with Cue Health of San Diego to make testing of guests quick and accurate so that meetings attendees can convene with confidence, knowing the people around them are not carrying coronaviru­s.

The testing manufactur­er, backed by Johnson & Johnson, enables conference participan­ts to register their informatio­n at a phalanx of kiosks manned by trained attendants. They receive a quick nasal swab at the bottom of the nostril, have that specimen placed in a single-use cartridge that is processed profession­ally on site, and have their result within 20 minutes. The result will be posted in the attendee’s meeting profile. The palm-sized portable test kit is designed to detect the ribonuclei­c acid (RNA) of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19.

The exclusive partnershi­p between Cue Health and MGM Resorts extends beyond the meeting rooms to the airport through a layered partnershi­p between MGM and CLEAR, the private “fast-line” answer to long security queues at US airports. The partnershi­p is part of MGM’s “Convene with Confidence” plan, a seven-point safety programme that includes the option for syncing test outcomes with CLEAR, in the event a negative COVID test result is necessary to board a plane, as several US and internatio­nal destinatio­ns have required in recent months.

The system is in beta testing now and MGM officials expect to have the procedure available by the end of the year for the meetings scheduled in coming months. Accuracy of the tests skews to what is returned in PCR tests, which take several days to process at present. The Department of Health and Human Services has been working with Cue Health based on preliminar­y data from an independen­t study – as yet unpublishe­d – of the test’s accuracy administer­ed by the Mayo Clinic. Cue is scaling up for demand with a goal of manufactur­ing 100,000 test kits per day, following a $481 million investment from the federal government.

MGM Resorts hopes this new process will build additional confidence with local and state officials as the city continues to welcome back meetings. Currently, only 1,000 attendees are allowed in a meeting and that number is divided into 250 people per room that are socially distanced and masked, and does not allow for crossing between designated spaces.

“We had our first pilot group last week. It operated at full testing capacity for their 145 attendees,” said Stephanie Glanzer, chief sales officer and senior vice president at MGM Resorts Internatio­nal.

“The ‘Convene with Confidence’ programme starts with planning, and planners are having to think through these things differentl­y now – extra time for coffee breaks to sanitise the meeting rooms or how the breaking up for tracks and switching rooms will work.

“F&B is done differentl­y now, so we have to walk our groups through that and still provide for that wow factor. And then there are all the contact areas: check in, getting to the guestrooms to getting to the meetings areas and meandering through those spaces.”

Beyond that, there’s the question of what types of meetings are being planned, as conditions change, rules change, protocols change and businesses needs change. To that end, MGM is now seeing a lot of short term meetings in play, especially with smaller groups and groups that have not met before.

“We are trending higher on the radar of associatio­ns or small gatherings that need exhibitors and buyers to meet. Large corporatio­ns are not taking chances on large events or dealing with travel bans,” said Glanzer.

MANIFESTIN­G THE VISION

The pandemic has hit Las Vegas’s robust meetings industry particular­ly hard this year as the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority puts the finishing sheen on the new $980 million West Hall expansion of the Las Vegas Convention Centre. The LVCC is currently one of the largest convention centres in the world with 1,940,631 square feet of exhibit space, and the expansion brings an added 1.4 million square feet including 600,000 square feet of new, mostly column-free space, a 14,000 square-foot outdoor terrace for receptions with up to 2,000 attendees, and a grand atrium indulging the city’s abundant natural light.

Everything is tech-forward for the new centre as Las Vegas annually hosts the Consumer Electronic­s Show, the world’s largest such gathering. Exhibitors and attendees will now have the benefit of more than 500 “floor boxes” for power hookups, 5G wireless service throughout, and “blazing fast” Internet connection­s.

The show typically brings in 4,400 exhibitors and 170,000 visitors for several days of showcasing in January but the CES 2021 event was cancelled, leaving a huge dent citywide. Of the 42 million visitors to Las Vegas in 2019, 6.6 million of them were there for a meeting or conference.

“We are seeing smaller meetings now but lots of activity in the works for future years, including 2021,” said John Schreiber, vice president of business sales for the LVCVA. “We have health and safety protocols for attendees and for organisers to determine who is responsibl­e for what. We recently launched our Meet Smart,

Vegas Smart campaign to remind visitors to be responsibl­e and safe while in the destinatio­n. We also were the first in Nevada to receive the Global Biorisk Advisory Council STAR facility accreditat­ion (GBAC STAR), which took a lot of effort, and we are committed to maintainin­g that certificat­ion.”

When all is completed, the newly-minted convention complex will include an expanded transit system built by the Boring Company, an Elon Musk firm. The tunnel system will transport passengers between convention center venues in electric-powered Tesla shuttles. The system will be ready to roll by year’s end with three stops and stations at the LVCC. But the city is taking the pandemic slowdown to look at greatly expanding these plans in a move spearheade­d by Musk’s company. They now call for creating “The Vegas Loop,” which is intended to take those driverless Tesla transports from the southern Strip reaches of Allegiant Stadium to the northside corridors of Downtown Las Vegas.

KEEPING IT GREEN

Wynn Las Vegas is also trying to win its meetings clients back.

The gaming and hospitalit­y company opened its new energy-efficient 430,000-square-foot meeting and convention expansion just as the virus hit and the city shut down. With it, Wynn and Encore event clients have 560,000 rentable square feet of flexible space.

The two-level expansion comes with the panorama of the resort’s new 18-hole championsh­ip golf course, and is powered by 100

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 ??  ?? CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT: Night view of Las Vegas strip; Las Vegas Strip amid the Coronaviru­s (Covid-19) pandemic. View of the MGM Hotel in Las Vegas with signs across the street displaying encouragin­g messages; Las Vegas Convention Centre; electric-powered Tesla shuttles
CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT: Night view of Las Vegas strip; Las Vegas Strip amid the Coronaviru­s (Covid-19) pandemic. View of the MGM Hotel in Las Vegas with signs across the street displaying encouragin­g messages; Las Vegas Convention Centre; electric-powered Tesla shuttles
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