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Long-unfinished blue Strip tower sets date for grand opening

ASSOCIATED PRESS
                                The partially completed Fontainebleau Las Vegas, the blue building on the left, stands along the skyline, in August 2017, in Las Vegas. Fountainebleau Las Vegas announced, this morning, that it plans to open its doors to the public in December 2023.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

The partially completed Fontainebleau Las Vegas, the blue building on the left, stands along the skyline, in August 2017, in Las Vegas. Fountainebleau Las Vegas announced, this morning, that it plans to open its doors to the public in December 2023.

LAS VEGAS >> A soaring blue-glass tower that has sat empty for more than a decade on the Las Vegas Strip — through the Great Recession and an unprecedented pandemic that shut down the famed tourist corridor for months — is set to open its doors to the public in December as the gambling center’s latest resort and casino.

Company executives for Fontainebleau Las Vegas made the announcement this morning, more than a year after the company publicly set a goal to open before the end of 2023.

In a statement, chief operating officer Colleen Birch said the long-awaited resort on the north end of the Strip represents “a rich heritage of luxury hospitality, chic elegance and unforgettable experiences.” The announcement marked the beginning of hiring efforts for a 3,700-room resort and casino that is expected to create thousands of jobs.

Named after Miami Beach’s 1950s-era Fontainebleau hotel, the luxury resort is one of the tallest buildings in Las Vegas.

Construction on the 67-story Fontainebleau Las Vegas began in 2007 amid the U.S. real estate bubble and was expected at the time to open in October 2009, but work stopped when it went bankrupt during the Great Recession. The project stalled for years.

In the decade that followed the original project’s collapse, ownership changed hands several times. In 2018, the resort even got a new name, Drew Las Vegas, after Steven Witkoff and Miami-based investment firm New Valley LLC bought it for $600 million. But the rebranded project was short-lived: Construction was suspended in March 2020, when the coronavirus pandemic triggered Nevada’s statewide shutdown.

A year later, the blue tower project came full circle after it was reacquired by Jeffrey Soffer, one of the original Fontainebleau Las Vegas developers. At the time, Soffer estimated the property was 75% complete and said it was in “mint condition.”

“We are grateful to have the opportunity to finish what we started and finally introduce the iconic Fontainebleau brand into one of the world’s largest hospitality destinations,” Soffer said in late 2021.

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