Former Nevada Sen. Harry Reid — the same person for whom our airport is named — had a pivotal role in backing high-speed rail instead of an innovative maglev project.
Business Columns
Las Vegas’ famed casino corridor is a highly lucrative and competitive tourism market, where massive resorts offer extensive and ever-changing menus of amenities.
One side of the street has massive resorts, but the other side has low-slung motel buildings, a boarded-up tavern and a never-finished Ferris wheel project.
Brett Torino and Paul Kanavos have already teamed up to build retail projects in the heart of the casino corridor.
According to Las Vegas city records last year, the one-story project will span more than 21,000 square feet and sit on a 5-acre plot of land.
Some Amazon buildings in North Las Vegas all sold a year or so after they were built, and prices have skyrocketed.
The property owners are seeking $7 million an acre, or $182 million total, for the spread near Mandalay Bay.
Over the past year or so, Las Vegas has seen a rising tally of sales and construction plans involving vacant land, retail properties and hotels on or near its famed casino corridor.
Las Vegas real estate investor Steve Siegel is perhaps best known for his portfolio of low-priced apartment complexes bearing his name, but now he is the Strip’s newest landowner.
Amid a warehouse boom that has depleted the tally of potential project sites in the valley and pushed up land prices, Apex is seeing more construction plans.
The proposal marks yet another new venture for Water Street, a once-sleepy corridor that city officials have long sought to revitalize.
A local developer has launched a new apartment project in downtown Las Vegas after he built and leased one up in the Arts District.
Southern California real estate firms Lyon Living and LandSpire Group recently started construction on a 294-unit rental complex at The Gramercy in the southwest valley.