Vegas considers $12 billion light rail, other transportation improvements
LAS VEGAS >> Those trademark Las Vegas lights may one day woosh by windows of a light rail train ferrying visitors from the airport to casino lobbies.
Local transportation leaders are floating a 30-year-plan that could cost more than $12 billion involving everything from wider sidewalks and more pedestrian bridges crisscrossing the Las Vegas Strip to extra monorail stops and planning for a light rail route linking the airport to downtown.
It’s Sin City’s gamble to keep travelers coming to its casinos and convention centers well into the future.
“We can continue to pursue the status quo, as we have historically,” states the Transportation Investment Business Plan from the Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada. But that would mean severe consequences to the area’s tourist- driven economy that competes with destinations already connecting their airports and city centers with mass transit, it notes.
The plan was born from a single group of transit officials, tourism leaders, taxi owners, hoteliers — some of whom had never spoken before until the CEO of the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority convened them two years ago, tasking them to leave self-interest aside.
Factoring in debt payments and accounting for inflation through the year 2046, the price could be higher than $14 billion. And making it all work would require finding another $3.7 billion to $6.6 billion from other sources besides possible local, state and federal funding identified in the plan.
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Consultant Jeremy Aguero, a Las Vegas-based economic analyst and one of the plan’s architects, said the price tag is relatively small when weighed against the region’s $95 billion tourist-driven economy.
What it doesn’t include is the cost to build and maintain the light rail system, itself. That could amount to $2.1 billion to $12.5 billion depending if the track is below, at or above ground, and could take more than a decade to build.
The transportation blueprint envisions planning the light-rail system through 2022 before spending another five years on its final design. From start to finish, light-rail systems can take 12 years to build, said transit planning consultant David Knowles, hired to help with the plan.
Thirty years is a long time, though.
“We’re going to be living in an automated world. Peoples’ behavior is going to be completely different,” said Genevieve Giuliano, a transportation expert at the University of Southern California. “Maybe Las Vegas should be thinking about when these vehicles are driving themselves.”
Asked about automation, Aguero said it’s going to take “a really long time” for the public to adopt it.
The plan will get another 60 days for public review before a vote in March by the Regional Transportation Commission. If approved, projects would begin to be integrated into budgets. The transportation agency, the cities, the state and businesses would each need to make it happen.
Talk of linking the Las Vegas Strip to McCarran International Airport has been long discussed.
“It just blows me away that we still have not moved forward on that,” said Clark County Commissioner Chris Giunchigliani at a meeting this week when the plan was discussed.
In 2005, then MGM Mirage Chairman Terry Lanni anticipated the just-opened Las Vegas Monorail being linked to the airport along with a people-mover on the other side, shuttling visitors from Mandalay Bay to Treasure Island with stops inbetween.
But the privately-financed $650 million monorail suffered financially, declared bankruptcy in 2010 and has since been working to boost its ridership along a few miles behind the Strip that connects several hotels with the Las Vegas Convention Center, but doesn’t go the airport or downtown as originally planned.
As it is now, a convention as large as the upcoming CES, the annual consumer electronics show that attracted more than 176,000 last year, involves countless hailed taxi-cabs at the airport and 360 shuttle buses moving attendees between conventions centers to hotels at a huge expense to the convention organizers. And that’s with attendees accounting for some 147,736 rides on the monorail.
“You have three of the largest convention centers and so many hotel rooms,” said Karen Chupka, senior vice president with CES. “It only makes sense that you should have a world-class transportation system.”
15 responses to “Vegas considers $12 billion light rail, other transportation improvements”
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Honolulu should sell its train and components to Las Vegas and cut our losses.
Don’t forget to strap Mufi and Caldwell to the sold rail as a gesture of a tip.
Vegas is forward looking. Their monorail is already more efficient and easier to get around especially if you have an unlimited pass. The light rail that they are planning makes sense to link downtown and the strip with the airport. It is silly that rail opposers here want to stop rail at Middle Street instead of going all the way to downtown.
Well come back from Vegas after you win a mega bucks jackpot and give it to City for rail.
i don’t want to stop it at middle street. i want to stop it at kapolei!
Las Vegas is coming to grips that widening streets cannot keep up with the number of automobiles expected to be on the roads in thirty years. Hopefully Cliff Slater and his merry men of the dinosaur era will move to Las Vegas to try and convince the city that traffic gridlock is preferable to rail.
That would make Mr. Cliff a hundred years old in the next thirty years?
Actually city traffice is not an issue if you use Google Maps and avoid the congested streets. You can get around just fine by using parallel side streets, freeways, other routes. Did this on one trip where I was driving, not a problem.
Don’t tell them our SECRET! They will all do it and we lose our quick route.
New York and Las Vegas is a little more different than Honolulu is. There are enough people on the mainland city hobs to substantiate at rail. Honolulu just doesn’t have enough people to justify a rail.
Sorry Mike, that attempt to produce written English just didn’t work out. Better luck next time buddy.
On one trip to Vegas where a rental car was not used, it took the airport shuttle van 90 minutes to go from the airport to the California Hotel due to all the stops enroute. Not good.
Second thought we could have got off at closer Sam’s Town, taken the free shuttle to the Cal, got there faster. Lesson learned.
Did you read that? Light Rail is being proposed. Light rail from the airport all along the strip. Not heavy rail which we are now stuck with.
It has not been determined if the Las Vegas will be underground, street level or elevated.
our rail will rust away before vegas finishes building their light rail.