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The Newsroom - 2008 |
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Moulin Rouge gets help

Developer found to help revival of Bonanza Road hotel

February 08, 2008 - An investment firm with more than $4 billion in
assets will take on one of the most vexing casino projects in Las Vegas, a
revival of the long-defunct Moulin Rouge.

Republic Urban Properties LLC of Washington, D.C., will enter a joint venture
with Moulin Rouge Development Corp., owners of a 15-acre site that in 1955 was
home to the first racially integrated casino in Las Vegas.

The deal, confirmed Thursday by Republic Urban President and Chief Executive
Officer David Peter, calls for $700 million in investment for a hotel-casino on
Bonanza Road east of Martin Luther King Boulevard.

If the project succeeds, it would be the culmination of decades of fitful
attempts to breathe new life into one of the most culturally significant places
in Las Vegas.

"The old facade and tower sign is all that will remain," Peter said. "For the
most part it will be ground-up construction."

Reviving activity at the Moulin Rouge won't be easy. It's in a blighted area of
downtown Las Vegas near a soup kitchen, vacant lots and boarded-up storefronts.
The site is marked by a plaque detailing the history of the Moulin Rouge and
occupied by the dilapidated remains of an extended-stay hotel.

The owners are scheduled to go before the Las Vegas Planning Commission on Feb.
28 with plans for a 41-story development with 1,727 hotel rooms and a
72,600-square-foot casino. They are asking for a height variance and rezoning,
according to city records.

The company says the first phase of the project would include 700 rooms and
50,000 square feet of retail and spa facilities along with a restaurants,
meeting and convention space, a poolside nightclub and concert venue.

It's not the first time Moulin Rouge investors have raised hopes for a revival
of the bygone casino. In 2004, shortly after taking over the property in the
wake of a fire that destroyed the original structure the previous year, they
described plans for a 40,000-square-foot casino, a 500-room hotel, a Motown Café
and a community center. Later that year they scaled down the plans.

Alan Glover, marketing director for the Moulin Rouge company, said Republic
Urban's experience creating and reviving developments in urban cores is a good
fit for the Moulin Rouge.

"Once they laid eyes on the project, they began to see the opportunity," Glover
said. "They recognized the history."

Republic Urban's projects include The Portals, a $1 billion mixed-use
development in Washington, D.C., that includes offices for the Federal
Communications Commission, the Federal Aviation Administration, private
government contractors and the Mandarin Oriental Hotel, a 400-room upscale
hotel. |

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