Genting’s Strip project may house studio tour-type theme park
By HOWARD STUTZ
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Posted May 7, 2014 - 11:28am Updated May 7, 2014 - 1:43pm
There may not be pandas, but the Strip may house a studio tour-type theme park once Malaysia-based Genting Berhad finishes developing an 87-acre site for Resorts World Las Vegas.
The Nevada Gaming Control Board on Wednesday recommended Genting be given a preliminary finding of suitability to hold a state gaming license. The Nevada Gaming Commission will take up the matter May 22.
Genting will still need to apply for a full gaming license before Resorts World Las Vegas can open.
Construction of the development will take place over multiple years and include at least two or three phases.
The initial phase will cost $4 billion and will include 3,000 hotel rooms, a casino with a combined 3,500 slot machines and table games, 30 food and beverage outlets, a 4,000-seat theater and an elaborate garden attraction that will serve as the property’s front door to the Strip.
Genting will also build a rooftop sky park and observation deck atop the 674-foot-tall tower, whose height has already been approved by the Federal Aviation Administration, company officials told the Control Board during a presentation at the Sawyer Building that lasted more than two hours.
Other attractions include a 50,000 square foot, 58-foot-tall aquarium that will feature a variety of exotic fish.
Christian Goode, who oversees Genting’s Americas division, said site development is already underway on the northern Strip land parcel on which the unfinished Echelon buildings stand.
Goode said Genting plans to incorporate 80 percent to 85 percent of the Echelon buildings into the Resorts World development. He said it will take 24 to 36 months to complete the project’s first phase on the former Stardust site
“You should see some major development by the second half of the year,” Goode said.
While describing Resorts World Malaysia, Genting President and Chief Operating Officer Kong Han Tan told the Control Board the company will add a 20th Century Fox World studio tour-style theme park that is expected to open in 2016.
When questioned by Control Board Chairman A.G. Burnett, Tan said the company is considering adding a similar theme park to one of the next phases of Resorts World Las Vegas.
Control Board member Sean Reid asked whether the company was still considering a live panda exhibit at the Strip resort.
Goode said there are many hurdles to clear with the Chinese government before the company could get a panda permit.
“It’s a complicated process,” Goode said. “We’re looking into it.”
Genting Chairman KT Lim told the regulators that Resorts World Las Vegas would increase visitation to Southern Nevada, primarily from foreign destinations. The company has a customer database with more than 1 million names.
“Cannibalizing the Las Vegas existing market is not an option,” Lim said. “We think we can drive new visitation to Las Vegas.”