
MGM City Center位于 Las Vegas Strip中心,美丽湖赌场酒店和蒙特卡洛景区之间。
这一项目将2700户私人住宅、两栋400客房的非赌博式精品酒店、一栋60层高,含4000客房的度假娱乐场,以及大约500000平方英尺的零售娱乐设施融合进单一城市核心。
整个方案由MGM MIRAGE和8位世界顶级建筑师合力完成。
这一项目有望在2009年底完工。
MGM City Center Project
New York City’s Ehrenkrantz, Eckstut & Kuhn Architects, is planning and designing a $7 billion, 18-million-square-foot vertical development called the MGM MIRAGE Project CityCenter for MGM MIRAGE Corporation on the Las Vegas Strip. The 66-acre metropolis will be built between the Bellagio and Monte Carlo hotel casinos and will be a mixed-use cosmopolitan center of hotels, luxury condominiums, and shopping—all within an urban setting.
The mixed-use development will be composed of a “skyline” of two 400-room boutique hotels, one 4,000-room hotel and casino, four towers of 2,500 residential units, and 550,000 square feet of high-end retail, dining, and entertainment space. The total number of buildings will be between 40 and 50, with the tallest buildings 65–70 stories. Construction will begin this summer and completion is expected within five years. The modest Boardwalk Hotel, owned by MGM and known for its Coney Island amusement park façade, currently sits with lot space between Bellagio and Monte Carlo but will close in May 2006.
The ambitious mini-city project will allow people to gamble, shop, dine, walk, and even live—without ever leaving the property. The pedestrian-oriented urban environment will be the first on the Strip to combine private residences with hotels and casinos. Public squares, hidden parking structures, covered passageways, and a boulevard are all part of the urban plan.
Integrated work of architecture
Stanton Eckstut, FAIA, principal-in-charge, points out that MGM MIRAGE is an integrated work of architecture stressing a cosmopolitan design. “MGM came to us with a vision of a city as the next attraction, believing that Las Vegas was maturing and needed more of an urban fabric,” he says. “They were seeking higher density and mixed uses. They were challenging us to accomplish that.”
Peter Cavaluzzi, FAIA, design principal, explains that MGM had an interest in residential. “It’s a big market that they are trying to meet in Las Vegas, and they wanted to create a development right on the Strip that incorporated residential,” he says. “They had a vision of ‘the city of the 22nd century.’ They wanted it to be very contemporary and a reflection of Las Vegas’ new brand of urbanism. This is not a theme development. The theme, if there is one, is city-making.”
Eckstut stresses that the density of parking was one of the biggest challenges. “Parking is free and there is a lot of parking. We were given the opportunity to provide convenient parking and at the same time, through design, make sure you never see the parking. That’s not something any modern city has done, and the absence of visible parking creates a marketing advantage with the fact that there will be no charge for parking. We also were able to link all the rooftops together to create an upper level park system with a landscape throughout all the rooftops responding to the desert climate.”
Jim Murren, president and chief financial officer of the MGM MIRAGE, is pleased with the design and how it highlights the valley vistas. “We commissioned a complete architectural design that utilizes every square inch to its maximum potential and is in harmony with the natural landscape.”
MIRAGE places its bets
An increase in Vegas’ residential population coupled with rising tourism prompted the MIRAGE to think all-in-one, with an upscale focus. But the high-stakes inspiration also comes from wanting a place made of neighborhoods where people live and interact with their neighbors, not just a place for tourists to gamble. Murren explains that the MGM Las Vegas Project City Center is inspired by the pedestrian-friendly, diverse neighborhoods of the SoHo district in New York City.
According to MGM, its Project City Center Las Vegas, once completed, could be the largest privately financed development project in the U.S. The second phase of the project will include creation of the residential neighborhood, including the four towers with a total of 2,500 residential units.
“When this project begins coming on-line, if it occurs within the context described by the architect, I believe it will bring an additional level of activity, interest and character to the Strip,” says Robert A. Fielden, FAIA, president-elect of AIA Las Vegas and senior principal at RAFI: Planning, Architecture, Urban Design.