Marriott International Bails on Beleaguered Fontainebleau Project

Marriott International Bails on Beleaguered Fontainebleau Project.

Costfoto / NurPhoto / Getty Images

Key Takeaways

Hotel giant Marriott International announced Thursday it had pulled out of the Las Vegas Strip project formerly known as the Fontainebleau and later The Drew Las Vegas. The Bethesda, Maryland-based group said it had “reached an amicable settlement” with current owner Fontainebleau Development.

Fontainebleau The Fontainebleau megaresort project, pictured, was only 70 percent complete when it was abandoned at the height of the last recession. (Image: Shutterstock)

Fontainebleau told The Las Vegas Review-Journal the project was still going ahead, and it would manage and operate the hotel itself.

“Having come full circle and taken ownership of the site in Las Vegas, we intend to fulfill our original vision and deliver the same extraordinary hospitality experience that our guests have come to expect from Fontainebleau Development,” the statement said.

Unfinished Business

Fontainebleau first unveiled plans for the Strip development 16 years ago. It was supposed to be a sister property to the company’s iconic Miami Beach hotel. But development was derailed by the Great Recession.

Fontainebleau spent $2 billion before the project was forced into Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Lenders got spooked by the dire economic outlook and bailed. Bank of America and JP Morgan Chase canceled $770 million in funding.

The development has stood dormant ever since, a monument to economic implosion. It has changed hands twice since Fontainebleau cofounder Jeff Soffer with the help of Koch Industries in February this year.

Billionaire investor Carl Icahn bought the building in a 2010 bankruptcy auction for $150 million. He sold it in 2017 to the property developer

Witkoff began redeveloping the unfinished megaresort, which he renamed The Drew Las Vegas in honor of his son Andrew Witkoff, who died of a drug overdose in 2011.

But the developer halted construction in March 2020, as the coronavirus pandemic forced the shutdown of businesses in Las Vegas. At the time the pandemic hit, Witkoff was close to finalizing a $2 billion construction loan, but it never came through. History was repeating itself.

Fontainebleau and Koch Industries agreed to take on Witkoff’s debt when they acquired the property this year as part of a process to avoid foreclosure.

Mystery Exit

On Thursday, Fontainebleau was eager to underline that the Marriott deal had been agreed on with previous owner Witkoff.

But until very recently, the hotel operator had planned to forge ahead on the project with Fontainebleau. In a statement on its website in July, Marriot said the property would open in October 22 as “the first Marriott hotel on the Las Vegas Strip.”

Per the deal with Witkoff, Marriott would invest $50 million over time, which would be converted into an ownership stake.

Article Sources
York Pennsylvania Casino Approved by Local Officials, Penn National Reveals Design Details editorial policy.
  1. Georgia Lawmaker and Expanded Gaming Proponent Pushing for All-or-Nothing Gambling Referendum in 2020

Compare Accounts
×
Train Service Likely To Resume Between Thailand and Cambodia’s Gambling Destination of Poipet
Provider
Name
Description
PointsBet U.S. Announces New Sports Betting Policy to Attract Sharps, Seeks to Expand  Georgia Lawmaker and Expanded Gaming Proponent Pushing for All-or-Nothing Gambling Referendum in 2020  Florida-Seminole Compact Deal That Would Authorize Sports Betting Now on Life Support, Lawmakers Say  Melco Resorts Announces Second $500M Senior Note Offering, Casino Giant Raising $1B in Capital  Philippine Police Create Special Units to Investigate Kidnappings over Gambling Debts  Rincon Band Can’t Intervene in Lawsuit Sparked by Harrah’s SoCal Reopening Mid-Lockdown  Las Vegas Raiders One Step Closer to Reality as Mark Davis Files Relocation Paperwork  British Army Claims It Has Eradicated Illegal Casinos From Its Corner of Cyprus  Philippine Police Create Special Units to Investigate Kidnappings over Gambling Debts  Casino Smoking Opposition Group Celebrates Atlantic City Council Vote