Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

The LVCVA is on the verge of placing a big bet on the future.

- RICHARD N. VELOTTA INSIDE TOURISM

OH, there’s blackjack and poker and the roulette wheel. A fortune won and lost on ev’ry deal. All you need’s a strong heart and a nerve of steel. — Elvis Presley, “Viva Las Vegas”

The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority is on the verge of placing one of the biggest bets in its history.

It’s the futures bet of all futures bets.

The 14-member board will gather Wednesday to consider its $358.2 million budget for the 2020 fiscal year — and separately to finalize a $48.7 million contract with Hawthorne, California-based The Boring Company, a spinoff of Elon Musk’s SpaceX venture.

The Boring contract is for the design and constructi­on of an undergroun­d people-mover transit system for the Las Vegas Convention Center campus.

The deal would include developing:

Less than a mile of twin vehicular tunnels.

A pedestrian tunnel that would link the Platinum lot with the South Hall and eliminate manned crosswalks on Swenson Street.

Three undergroun­d stations: one east of the South Hall, beneath the Platinum parking lot ; another at the convergenc­e of the North and Central halls beneath an area currently used as a ride-hailing pickup point; and the third at the west end of the new exhibit hall under constructi­on.

Elevators and escalators to access the stations.

All of the back-of-thehouse features for lighting, power, video surveillan­ce, ventilatio­n and life safety, cellphone and Wi-Fi systems, intercom and public address systems and a control room.

Under a schedule provided by Boring — TBC as it is referred to — design and securing regulatory approvals would occur through August, with constructi­on starting in September. TBC plans to have its first tunnel completed by the end of February and the second by the end of April. The project would be completed by November 2020 and available for use a month later, just in time for CES 2021.

The system would use vehicles on Tesla chassis with capacities of up to 16 passengers each. The vehicles would be operated in

autonomous mode and offer pointto-point service. That means a passenger boarding at the Platinum lot could ride directly to the new exhibit hall without stopping.

In TBC’s earlier presentati­ons, the company said that if the Convention Center system proved capable, there would be no reason why the company couldn’t build a citywide system of tunnels to solve Las Vegas’ growing transporta­tion problem.

But here’s the gamble: The Boring Company has never built the system it describes anywhere. There is a test track in Hawthorne, but that’s it. No commercial use; no track record of customer satisfacti­on.

Las Vegas would be the proving ground.

For TBC, that’s great. Company officials want to show what their tunneling machines — which apparently can eat anything in their path — can do.

Reticence toward the TBC plan comes from an unlikely source.

Las Vegas Mayor Carolyn Goodman, a board member whose husband, Oscar, has been known to place a big wager or two, is concerned that if TBC could not deliver what it promises, it would be a huge setback for the city’s convention business, primed for emergence with a $1.4 billion expansion and renovation underway.

If TBC knocked it out of the park, Las Vegas could get a futuristic transit system — a huge plus with the Las Vegas Monorail foundering and the prospect for light rail nowhere in sight.

LVCVA President and CEO Steve Hill has noted that undergroun­d constructi­on minimizes disruption­s The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority is expected to consider a $48.7 million contract with The Boring Company for an undergroun­d autonomous electric vehicle transporta­tion system for the Las Vegas Convention Center. Convention CenterDr. on the surface. Hill has smartly included a number of contract safeguards to minimize risk.

The subterrane­an transit system could become a tourist attraction itself with thousands worldwide likely to want a look at the new creation.

TBC will have to get permission from Clark County to burrow under Swenson Street, Desert Inn Road, Paradise Road and Convention Center Drive, according to a map outlining the route. The LVCVA would put its own confidence on display with the route tunneling beneath the convention center’s Central Hall.

Still, it’s a big gamble. We will find out Wednesday if the LVCVA has the nerves of steel to roll the dice. 35,000 May 31-June 3 Sands Expo & Convention Center

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