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MYSTERY SOLVED: MGM Bought $54M Sliver of Land to Expand Bellagio Retail

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Posted on: July 1, 2024, 05:30h. 

Last updated on: July 1, 2024, 05:35h.

The mystery of why the MGM Resorts paid $54 million for a 1.62-acre sliver of land dividing the Bellagio from the Cosmopolitan in 2023 has just been solved by leaked Clark County permit applications.

These are renderings of MGM’s plans for a new Bellagio expansion, codenamed Project Mojave, to be built in part on the 1.62 acres of land it purchased in 2023. The building in the background is the Cosmopolitan, which MGM also operates. (Image: Scott Roeben/Vital Vegas)

The expansion, according to schematics first published by Casino.org’s own Vital Vegas blogger Scott Roeben, will be a three-story plaza extending from the hotel’s main entrance out to Las Vegas Boulevard.

Project Mojave’s second floor, with Las Vegas Boulevard to the right. (Image: Scott Roeben/Vital Vegas)

Cosmopolitan’s service road will not be affected by the new project, though the current elevated bridge from the Strip to the Bellagio — from which a people-mover was removed in 2017 to cut costs — looks like it will be sacrificed.

According to the plans, the space will boast a mix of high-end retail and restaurants — indoor on the first two floors and outdoor on the third. And its roof will feature a 10,000 square-foot nightclub with a pool, overlooking the Bellagio fountains and Strip.

A rooftop nightclub with a pool and one hell of a view. (Image: Scott Roeben/Vital Vegas)

The plaza is referred to by the schematics as Project Mojave, but that’s undoubtedly just its code name, not what the expansion will be called.

It was designed by Marnell Architecture, whose lead architect also designed the Bellagio.

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A Google Earth image of the 1.62-acre strip of land acquired last year by MGM Resorts. (Image: Google Earth)

Back when Steve Wynn owned the Bellagio, he leased the parcel sliver from a previous owner – involuntarily, because the owner wouldn’t sell it to him.

Did you enjoy the view from the Bellagio’s walkway to its main entrance? Too bad. You’ll have to pay for it soon. (Image: Scott Roeben/Vital Vegas)

MGM inherited the lease when they purchased the property for $6.4 billion in 2000 and exercised the option to purchase it last year, after purchasing the operating rights to the adjoining Cosmopolitan from Blackstone for $1.6 billion in 2022.

Measuring a few hundred feet, the sliver had been used as a road, parking lot, and garbage storage by MGM for the Bellagio. Since it was only zoned as a vacant lot, Clark County must now rezone the area to approve MGM’s new project.

MGM has not commented on the project, or given a timeline for its construction or completion.

Complicating matters somewhat — or at least making them interesting — is the fact that MGM only owns the operating rights to the Bellagio and Cosmopolitan. It sold the property assets of the Bellagio to Blackstone Real Estate Income Trust (BREIT) for $4.25 billion in a sale-leaseback transaction in 2019. And last August, BREIT sold a 21.9% stake of that to Realty Income for $950 million.

When Blackstone sold Cosmopolitan for $5.65 billion in 2021, the real estate of that resort was acquired by BREIT, the Cherng Family Trust, and Stonepeak Partners for $4 billion.

 



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