flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

20-acre lagoon highlights $1.5 billion Paradise Park planned for Las Vegas

Events Facilities

20-acre lagoon highlights $1.5 billion Paradise Park planned for Las Vegas

The Wynn Resorts board recently gave the go-ahead for the project, which may begin construction on its first phase as early as December.


By David Malone, Associate Editor | April 27, 2017

An early rendering of Paradise Park. Courtesy of Wynn Resorts.

Wynn Resorts is preparing to convert a 130-acre golf course in Las Vegas into Paradise Park, a $1.5 billion development with a 20-acre lagoon at its core. According to CNBC, the park was originally disclosed last year, but it wasn’t until just recently the company’s board approved the project.

The lagoon will include a white sand waterfront and host water sports during the day and fireworks shows at night. A boardwalk is planned for the lagoon, as well. The lagoon and beach area, which includes the boardwalk, retail, and restaurants, will be part of the first phase of the project. This phase should be completed no later than 2020 and is expected to drive other, following amenities. 

Subsequent phases, of which there has been no word as to how many there will be, may include convention space, a new residential/hotel tower, and entertainment attractions. The tower may hold as many as “a couple thousand rooms,” Wynn Resorts Chairman and CEO Steve Wynn said during the company’s first-quarter earnings call.

Wynn’s vision is for Paradise Park to be a family destination with the lagoon providing a daily Disneyland-type show, but on a larger scale.

Paradise Park will sit adjacent to the Wynn Las Vegas resort complex just off the Las Vegas Strip. A media event is expected within the next few months to provide more details about the project.

Related Stories

| Oct 13, 2010

Biloxi’s convention center bigger, better after Katrina

The Mississippi Coast Coliseum and Convention Center in Biloxi is once again open for business following a renovation and expansion necessitated by Hurricane Katrina.

| Oct 13, 2010

Apartment complex will offer affordable green housing

Urban Housing Communities, KTGY Group, and the City of Big Bear Lake (Calif.) Improvement Agency are collaborating on The Crossings at Big Bear Lake, the first apartment complex in the city to offer residents affordable, eco-friendly homes. KTGY designed 28 two-bedroom, two-story townhomes and 14 three-bedroom, single-story flats, averaging 1,100 sf each.

| Oct 13, 2010

Community center under way in NYC seeks LEED Platinum

A curving, 550-foot-long glass arcade dubbed the “Wall of Light” is the standout architectural and sustainable feature of the Battery Park City Community Center, a 60,000-sf complex located in a two-tower residential Lower Manhattan complex. Hanrahan Meyers Architects designed the glass arcade to act as a passive energy system, bringing natural light into all interior spaces.

| Oct 13, 2010

Bookworms in Silver Spring getting new library

The residents of Silver Spring, Md., will soon have a new 112,000-sf library. The project is aiming for LEED Silver certification.

| Oct 12, 2010

Holton Career and Resource Center, Durham, N.C.

27th Annual Reconstruction Awards—Special Recognition. Early in the current decade, violence within the community of Northeast Central Durham, N.C., escalated to the point where school safety officers at Holton Junior High School feared for their own safety. The school eventually closed and the property sat vacant for five years.

| Oct 12, 2010

Richmond CenterStage, Richmond, Va.

27th Annual Reconstruction Awards—Bronze Award. The Richmond CenterStage opened in 1928 in the Virginia capital as a grand movie palace named Loew’s Theatre. It was reinvented in 1983 as a performing arts center known as Carpenter Theatre and hobbled along until 2004, when the crumbling venue was mercifully shuttered.

| Oct 12, 2010

Gartner Auditorium, Cleveland Museum of Art

27th Annual Reconstruction Awards—Silver Award. Gartner Auditorium was originally designed by Marcel Breuer and completed, in 1971, as part of his Education Wing at the Cleveland Museum of Art. Despite that lofty provenance, the Gartner was never a perfect music venue.

| Sep 13, 2010

Stadium Scores Big with Cowboys' Fans

Jerry Jones, controversial billionaire owner of the Dallas Cowboys, wanted the team's new stadium in Arlington, Texas, to really amp up the fan experience. The organization spent $1.2 billion building a massive three-million-sf arena that seats 80,000 (with room for another 20,000) and has more than 300 private suites, some at field level-a first for an NFL stadium.

| Aug 11, 2010

JE Dunn, Balfour Beatty among country's biggest institutional building contractors, according to BD+C's Giants 300 report

A ranking of the Top 50 Institutional Contractors based on Building Design+Construction's 2009 Giants 300 survey. For more Giants 300 rankings, visit http://www.BDCnetwork.com/Giants

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category


Resiliency

Austin area evacuation center will double as events venue

A new 45,000 sf FEMA-operated evacuation shelter in the Greater Austin metropolitan area will begin construction this fall. The center will be available to house people in the event of a disaster such as a major hurricane and double as an events venue when not needed for emergency shelter.



halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021