December 24, 2010
Cosmopolitan Hotel Opens in Vegas, Spurring Hopes for Tourism Revenues
Robert Doyle READ TIME: 4 MIN.
LAS VEGAS (AP) - The chief executive of Las Vegas' newest casino compared its ritzy opening with an airplane that lands but has to quickly take off again.
"It's just a touch and go because we really have to ... take off," said John Unwin of the $3.9 billion Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas. "It's just the beginning."
Unwin and other executives counted down the final seconds to the resort's opening Wednesday night with select gamblers around a craps table. One threw a pair of dice to mark the casino's first wager, rolling a nine.
The Cosmopolitan opens as Sin City's last new major casino-resort for at least a few years. Owned by German lender Deutsche Bank, it was the last casino to receive full funding before loans became impossible to get for casino projects conceived years ago when money flowed here and gambling flourished.
The economy has battered tourism in Nevada, but Cosmopolitan officials hope their opening is timed with a rebound.
"It really is just a moment in time that we've all been working towards, but it's all about the future," Unwin said. "I can't wait to show people around here."
Hundreds of people lined up on the Strip near the Bellagio hotel-casino next door - a handful as early as 4 p.m. - awaiting the moment the doors would open to the resort cooridor's newest adult playground.
"I would love to stay - this is my first time in Vegas," said 32-year-old Laura Kunz of Chicago, who planned to leave town on a 1 a.m. flight but waited with a ticket to a poolside concert at the resort with Brandon Flowers, the frontman for rock band The Killers..
"We already checked out of the hotel, why not hang out?" she said.
The main attraction of the night was the resort itself, with its smiling dealers and cocktail waitresses, chic art and three-story chandelier bar made of crystal strings.
The ritzy opening comes at a time when Nevada is attempting to rebound from a weakened economy dependent on tourism. More visitors have come so far this year than in 2009 or 2008, but they're not spending as much money and there are more casinos on the Strip than before.
Economists from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas said the recovery of Sin City is dependent on a rebound of the national economy, so people have more money to vacation in Nevada. The state has no other major industries to supplement gambling and tourism the economists said in a report released Wednesday.
Still, Unwin believes 2010 is a better time to open than last year.
"The time is right," he said. "We're so ready - we want to get started."
The Cosmopolitan opens on the Las Vegas Strip exactly one year after the Aria Resort & Casino, the centerpiece hotel of CityCenter next door to the Cosmopolitan. CityCenter, a joint venture owned by MGM Resorts International and Dubai World, posted an operating loss of $1.27 billion during the first three quarters this year.
The Cosmopolitan must attract thousands of people each day to gamble, occupy rooms and eat in its restaurants. Its relationship with Deutsche Bank allowed it to borrow money under much better terms than other casinos could have, but experts say it must still outperform even the top Strip casinos to justify its price tag.
To get there, Unwin said the Cosmopolitan must do extensive marketing and be willing to adjust based on customer demands.
"There will be unexpected things that happen so we'll work through those," he said. "One of our advantages as an independent is it allows us to be pretty nimble. We can make changes."
Competitors, however, aren't likely to give up customers without a fight.
The half-finished Fontainebleau Las Vegas was bought earlier this year in bankruptcy court by billionaire investor Carl Icahn for $156 million, but he hasn't said when he will finish it.
Boyd Gaming Corp. said last month in a regulatory filing that it doesn't expect to resume construction on its $4.8 billion Echelon project across the street for at least three to five years.
"We also believe financing for a development project like Echelon continues to be unavailable," Boyd said in the filing.
The Cosmopolitan has 2,995 hotel rooms - many originally planned as condominiums.
Some of the units are involved in litigation from buyers who wanted to purchase condominiums at the resort in 2005. Many have settled for refunds of two-thirds to three-quarters of their deposits, but several dozen protested Wednesday night on the sidewalk outside the resort amid tourists trying to get into the casino.
"They can't even get in to look at their condos," said Shahram Shayesteh, a lawyer whose firm represents about 100 buyers. "I don't think it's over yet."
A judge in Las Vegas ruled Tuesday that the Cosmopolitan can't rent out the units that are part of the dispute as the litigation plays out.
Lenny Martin, a Las Vegas real estate agent who said he sold 50 units at the Cosmopolitan and bought two himself, said he was upset that he couldn't see his units and wasn't invited to the opening.
When asked why he didn't take a settlement, Martin said: "Why should I?"
Long-term New Yorkers, Mark and Robert have also lived in San Francisco, Boston, Provincetown, D.C., Miami Beach and the south of France. The recipient of fellowships at MacDowell, Yaddo, and Blue Mountain Center, Mark is a PhD in American history and literature, as well as the author of the novels Wolfchild and My Hawaiian Penthouse. Robert is the producer of the documentary We Are All Children of God. Their work has appeared in numerous publications, as well as at : www.mrny.com.