It will be Diller Scofidio & Renfro's first Las Vegas concept design

Witkoff delays Drew Las Vegas resort opening until mid-2022

The Drew Las Vegas will open in the second quarter of 2022, and it will emphasize non-gambling amenities more than craps tables, reflecting the growing popularity of Vegas with visitors who come as much for the dining and nightlife as the gambling.
2019-04-17
Reading time 2:43 min
The USD 3.1 billion resort, affiliated with hotel giant Marriott International Inc., was originally scheduled to debut late next year. Chairman and CEO Steven Witkoff said that by delaying, the firm will have more certainty about his construction budget. Drew Las Vegas has also kicked off its sales efforts to group customers.

Real estate mogul Steven Witkoff is pushing back the opening of a USD 3.1 billion resort on the Las Vegas Strip by more than a year, slowing efforts to complete a partly built casino that was abandoned during the financial crisis a decade ago.

The Drew Las Vegas, as the project is called, will open in the second quarter of 2022, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer for Witkoff said. The project was originally scheduled to debut late next year. By delaying, Witkoff will have more certainty about his construction budget, he said.

Witkoff, 62, bought the unfinished Fontainebleau resort from billionaire investor Carl Icahn for USD 600 million two years ago. The 3,780-room resort will feature a giant pool, with restaurants and shops adjacent. It is located on the north end of the Strip, on the same side of the street as the Wynn Las Vegas and near the city’s convention center, which will be a big draw, Witkoff said.

The resort is affiliated with hotel giant Marriott International Inc., which doesn’t have a big presence in one of America’s busiest tourist cities. It will target high-end clients who might normally visit the Bellagio or Caesars Palace, according to Bloomberg.

The architecture firm of Diller Scofidio & Renfro, whose work includes the High Line in New York and the Broad Museum in Los Angeles, will lead a design effort creating something “cool, elegant, edgy,’’ Witkoff announced yesterday. It will emphasize non-gambling amenities more than craps tables, reflecting the growing popularity of Vegas with visitors who come as much for the dining and nightlife as the gambling. “The market has not seen new build to address who the new customer is,’’ Witkoff said.

Charles Renfro, Diller Scofidio + Renfro Partner and lead designer of the Drew, commented: "The team's design approach was inspired by the multiple ecologies of Las Vegas itself – the dynamic and rugged beauty of the Mojave Desert, Las Vegas' early adoption of modern architecture, and the city's enthusiastic embrace of spectacle. The Drew will weave these seemingly contradictory conditions into a new quixotic environment."

The Drew is designed to be easy to navigate, with 32 guest elevators situated right next to the front desk and a circular design for the shops, restaurants and entertainment venues. “When you build a great campus, you don’t want people migrating off your campus -- and we’ll build a great campus,’’ he explained.

While many Las Vegas operators have remodeled or renamed their hotels, a major new resort hasn’t opened since the Cosmopolitan Las Vegas in 2010. The previous developer of the Drew site, Miami’s Jeffrey Soffer, spent USD 2.8 billion before putting the project into bankruptcy. Witkoff said he had existing financing from JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Deutsche Bank AG. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Deutsche Bank have been hired to raise additional capital.

The Drew isn’t the only resort in the works. Genting is building a Resorts World casino on the site of the unfinished Echelon resort nearby.

With a confirmed opening date in the second quarter of 2022, Drew Las Vegas has also kicked off its sales efforts to group customers. Witkoff said he hoped the Drew would eventually become a hospitality brand with multiple boutique hotels -- and that a substantial piece of the profits would go to a family foundation that battles addiction. “We want to do something good, give something back and tell the story when you come, there is this name that spiritually honors someone,’’ Witkoff said. “And we’ll do a good thing with the money.’’

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