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Malaysian company plans multi-billion dollar casino project on Vegas strip

By Hannah Dreier

Associated Press

POSTED:
LAST UPDATED: 04:53 a.m. HST, Mar 04, 2013



LAS VEGAS » An Asian conglomerate says it will break ground next year on a long-stalled project that could help revitalize a dilapidated section of the Las Vegas Strip.

The Genting Group announced today that it is buying the site where Boyd Gaming Corp.'s partially built Echelon project has gathered dust for four years.

Genting says it will build a multi-billion dollar casino, its first in Las Vegas, on the 87-acre site.

The "Resorts World Las Vegas" project will feature 3,500 hotel rooms, a convention center and a 4,000-seat theater.

Echelon is one of a handful of high-profile multibillion-dollar projects that has stalled out indefinitely on the Las Vegas Strip since the economy crashed.

The partially-built complex on the northern end of the Las Vegas Strip was to be a mixed-use development complete with 5,000 rooms in six hotels, lush landscaping and luxury amenities.

The 48-year-old Stardust resort was demolished in 2007 to make way for the $4.8 billion project, which was slated to open next to Circus Circus by 2010.

Construction workers toiled for a year and built 12 stories on the corner of Las Vegas Boulevard and Desert Inn Road before the credit markets choked and Boyd Gaming Corp abruptly put the enterprise on hold.

The north Strip is also home to the Fontainebleau Las Vegas, a hulking bluish-green tower that was 70 percent completed when the construction workers were dismissed, and the Sahara hotel-casino, which went dark in 2011, and only recently began renovations.

The northern part of the tourist corridor used to boast casinos considered the pinnacle of luxury and style, but has fallen into disrepair in recent years.

The Genting Group said it plans to break ground on the new project in 2014, and open in 2016, creating tens of thousands of jobs in the process.

"This is an unparalleled opportunity to showcase what has made the Resorts World brand a globally recognized success for the past several decades," CEO KT Lim said in a statement.

Officials are expected to release additional details during a morning press conference.

The conglomerate already operates casinos in New York state, the Philippines, the United Kingdom, Singapore, and the Bahamas.

It opened its first casino in 1971, in Malaysia.






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Pocho wrote:
If only Hawaii legislature would use their noggins. Legalize gaming here and maybe some of these Asian money will come here! Where would you want to gamble? in the middle of the desert Vegas or in Tropical Hawaii?
on March 4,2013 | 04:36AM
Bdpapa wrote:
The State should have bought and built that property. Find a good manging partner, and focus on getting the locals to stay there and promote Hawaii tourism.
on March 4,2013 | 05:07AM
Pocho wrote:
It's best in Hawaii. Create jobs whatever way you think about having gambling in Hawaii, the good and the bad
on March 4,2013 | 05:46AM
hanalei395 wrote:
There was a referendum on casino gambling several years ago, and the vast majority of kamaaina voted ... NO. Casino gambling in beautiful Hawai'i Nei ...It wouldn't be Hawai'i. To get your gambling fix, go to Vegas, stay downtown, California Hotel, home away from home.
on March 4,2013 | 08:56AM
localguy wrote:
Gambling in the Nei? Really? When our elected bureaucrats willfully fail to manage the state budget year after year, raid funds to make up for their failing to do their job, are caught kowtowing to union bosses and special interest groups, can't manage simple programs like island wide towing, HI5 recycle program, can't manage rail, yada, yada, yada, do you really think gambling could be successfully managed? Really? In the Nei? Not going to happen. Gambling money would be raided for bureaucratic special projects, wasted every way possible. Just as bureaucrats wasted the tobacco settlement money. This is what they do, fail tax payers.
on March 4,2013 | 07:05AM
Ratrase wrote:
Seems like all of the things you mentioned were gambles. Why not turn Maui into a big casino so the paparazzi won't bother poor old Steven Tyler and company any more.
on March 4,2013 | 07:15AM
Mythman wrote:
Steven Tyler is a gamble, playing roulette with his life when he takes drugs. Oh, well, This company, Genting is big into Indian gambling already. That they are going to go to vegas is probably bad news for them coming here. Like Boyd, they would rather cherry pick our players and bring them over on excursions than to build out here and put up with the state's Bee S.
on March 4,2013 | 08:56AM
Sunny wrote:
This is the site that the former Stardust was on.
on March 4,2013 | 10:45AM
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