Boston Herald

Land values push higher on Vegas Strip

- By Eli Segall, Las Vegas Review-Journal

When casino giant Genting Group bought a mothballed project site on the north Strip a decade ago, it sparked hopes for a sleepy section of Las Vegas Boulevard.

It also marked a steep plunge in property values for the famed casino corridor.

On March 4, 2013, Boyd Gaming Corp. announced that it sold the partially-built Echelon resort property for $350 million in cash to Malaysia-based Genting. The sale amounted to roughly $4 million per acre, and by that measure, it was a bargain compared to what buyers paid years earlier, before the economy crashed, for land on the Strip.

But a lot has changed in the past decade.

Yes, Las Vegas’ economy got derailed by the pandemic. But in the years since Genting bought the plot for what’s now Resorts World Las Vegas, land values on the Strip have pushed higher, and the north edge of the corridor has seen more activity.

Rising sales Michael Parks, hotel-casino specialist with real estate brokerage CBRE Group, who has done numerous deals on and near the Strip, agreed with the notion that Boyd’s sale marked a bottoming out for land values following the frenzied mid2000s bubble.

The peak, he noted, was casino owner Phil Ruffin’s sale of the New Frontier in 2007 for $1.2 billion, or more than $30 million an acre, to Israeli investors. The buyers imploded the hotel, with plans to develop a megaresort, but the economy soon tanked and they never built it.

Land sales on the Strip were largely slow-going for years after Genting’s purchase but have since gained momentum.

Among last year’s deals, real estate firm The Siegel Group acquired roughly 10 acres on and near the north Strip for $75 million, and a North Dakota tribal nation purchased most of the 15-acre former Route 91 Harvest festival site, on the south Strip, for more than $90 million.

These and other sales, however, were surpassed by two blockbuste­rs in the pedestrian-choked center Strip area.

Developer Brett Torino and New York’s Flag Luxury Group acquired 2 acres on the Strip in 2021 for around $80 million, or $40 million an acre, and have since built a retail complex. And last year, Houston billionair­e Tilman Fertitta purchased roughly 6 acres of real estate for $270 million, or more than $43 million per acre.

He has already torn down buildings there, with plans to develop a 43-story casinoreso­rt.

Quiet stretch of Strip A decade ago, after Las Vegas’ once-supercharg­ed real estate market imploded and the broader economy crashed, the north Strip wasn’t the most inviting place.

Besides the skeleton of Echelon — Boyd had stopped constructi­on years earlier — the area included the stalled, unfinished Fontainebl­eau skyscraper, big land tracts where massive projects never materializ­ed and minimal foot traffic.

It was “just a glaring example of how hard the Strip, and Las Vegas, was hit as a result of the recession,” Parks said.

The north Strip still isn’t bustling with foot traffic, and there are still big parcels of land with an uncertain future. But the area has gained momentum.

The 67-story Fontainebl­eau, reacquired two years ago by original developer Jeffrey Soffer, is under constructi­on and scheduled to open in the fourth quarter this year.

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