Clark County commissioners on Wednesday approved a third time extension for the partially built Dream Las Vegas resort near the south edge of the Strip.
Eli Segall
Eli Segall joined the Review-Journal in 2016, covering real estate until 2023 when he joined the paper's investigations team. He rejoined the RJ's Business desk in 2025 to cover commercial real estate and other topics. Before the RJ, he covered real estate for four years at the Las Vegas Sun. Segall has also worked for the Silicon Valley/San Jose Business Journal, The Associated Press and other news groups. He has a bachelor’s in political science from the University of Michigan and a master’s in journalism from the University of Maryland. He has earned awards from the Nevada Press Association, Best of the West, New York State Society of CPAs, National Association of Real Estate Editors and others.
Construction is underway on an affordable-housing complex in North Las Vegas, a project backed by more than $60 million in financing from a big lender.
The meeting this week comes after a Clark County advisory board recently denied the application, and after Clark County firefighters responded Saturday to a report that jet fuel was spilling over the top of a tank at Reid International.
Southern Nevada’s restaurant-packed Chinatown commercial district is popular with locals and tourists alike, and retail centers there are typically filled with tenants.
Clark County commissioners are scheduled to consider a request for another extension on the Dream hotel-casino project near the south edge of the Strip.
Construction crews broke ground on a housing tract that is being developed for residents of a historically Black neighborhood nearby that has grappled for decades with widespread structural damage.
A building in the southwest valley was 95 percent leased at the time of sale.
Las Vegas-area home prices in August were effectively flat from a year earlier, a new report shows.
“I’m not letting the soft market slow me down,” said Las Vegas homebuilder Michael Johnson.
Boyd Gaming Corp. has hired a firm with a history of demolishing casinos to tear down a shuttered Las Vegas hotel, records show.
The family sold the land to Stevens through a business entity originally formed in 1908, called Sal Sagev Hotel Co. Inc., according to county and state records.
Across the country, most buyers are “still on the sidelines, waiting for mortgage rates to move lower.”
The Clark County Planning Commission gave the green light to a project that concerned neighbors, including the famed magician Teller.
The fenced-off property on the south edge of the Las Vegas Strip known for its pink elephant didn’t trade hands but is still available to purchase.
After years of fires and squatters, a rundown 1960s era Las Vegas condo complex is now under new ownership and slated to be torn down for new housing.
