Travis Business Advisors Podcast | TBA Podcast
I’m Slava Davidenko, founder of Travis Business Advisors, ABBA, IBBA and TABB member, Accredited Business Intermediary, Chicago GSB MBA.
I have 35 years of leadership experience in investing, operations and high-stakes deals. I’m building an Austin advisory for small and medium sized businesses.
On this channel, I share insights for Austin business owners planning an exit and buyers, planning to buy business located in Austin - whether five years away from the deal or just three months.
If you own a car wash, dental or veterinary practice, private school or education center, self-storage, or senior care - selling isn’t simple. Valuation, structure, taxes, transition, real estate, growth story - every decision affects your outcome.
Most brokers oversimplify. I don’t.
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DISCLAIMER: This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, financial, or investment advice. Always consult qualified professionals. Individual results vary significantly.
Travis Business Advisors Podcast | TBA Podcast
Harmon Hotel: Vegas's $275 Million Mistake
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The Las Vegas Strip is no stranger to spectacle, but amidst the neon and excitement stands a $275 million ghost story worthy of your attention. We're diving deep into the rise and spectacular fall of the Harmon Hotel – a gleaming 49-story glass tower that never welcomed a single guest.
Designed by the renowned Foster + Partners as the crown jewel of the massive $8.5 billion CityCenter complex, the Harmon was meant to redefine luxury in a city already synonymous with extravagance. But routine inspections in 2008 revealed a catastrophic flaw: improperly installed rebar throughout 15 floors of the structure. This seemingly technical issue triggered a cascade of consequences – construction halted, plans were dramatically scaled back, and years of multimillion-dollar litigation followed between MGM Resorts and the Perini Building Company.
What makes this story particularly fascinating is the strange visual paradox it created on the Strip: a seemingly complete modern building standing empty for years before being painstakingly dismantled floor by floor. The Harmon's failure wasn't the result of a single dramatic event, but rather a series of overlooked details and inadequate oversight – a powerful reminder that no amount of ambition can overcome neglected fundamentals.
The Harmon Hotel offers profound lessons about the dangers of prioritizing speed over quality, the vital importance of rigorous oversight, and what happens when the glamorous vision outpaces meticulous execution. Whether you're fascinated by engineering failures, business case studies, or simply love a compelling Vegas tale, this episode unpacks how a quarter-billion-dollar investment vanished into thin air, leaving behind nothing but valuable lessons and an empty plot of land. How do we prevent these silent failures in our own ambitious projects? Listen now to find out.
📰 Read more about this topic in our latest article: https://sunrisecapitalgroup.com/the-275m-skyscraper-that-never-opened-the-rise-and-fall-of-the-harmon-hotel-in-las-vegas/
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🏢 Industries we work with - learn which businesses we help prepare for sale
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⚠️ Disclaimer: All scenarios are composite, hypothetical, or modified for confidentiality — no real transactions are depicted. Financial outcomes are illustrative only, not guarantees. This content is educational only and does not constitute legal, tax, financial, or brokerage advice. No professional-client relationship is created. Consult qualified professionals before making any business decisions.
The Anomaly on the Vegas Strip
Speaker 1Okay, so picture this Smack bang in the middle of the sensory overload that is the Las Vegas trip.
Speaker 2Yeah, all the lights, the noise, the sheer scale of it all.
Speaker 1Exactly, and right there you have this. Well, this anomaly A sleek, modern glass tower, Beautiful, really.
Speaker 2But strange because it never actually opened, Not once.
Speaker 1Never opened its doors to a single guest. Think about that visual of this contemporary structure, just silent amidst all the Vegas chaos.
Speaker 2It does paint a strange picture, doesn't it? An intended symbol of progress that became something else entirely.
Speaker 1Right, and figuring out that something else is what we're digging into today. This is the story of the Harmon Hotel.
Speaker 2Which was meant to be a really high profile part of the massive city center complex.
Speaker 1Yeah, an $8.5 billion development Hotels, casinos, shops, the works and the Harmon. It was planned as this high-end icon, the jewel in the crown, sort of.
Speaker 2Top-tier luxury Vegas. That was the idea.
Speaker 1And our sources for this. Our understanding comes from the available details surrounding its planning, its construction and its eventual well disappearance. So for you, listening in our mission here is pretty straightforward we want to unpack how such a hugely ambitious project could go so spectacularly wrong.
Speaker 2And pull out the key lessons.
Speaker 1Exactly. Think of this as your focus guide to a really fascinating failure cutting through the noise to get to what actually matters.
Speaker 2Okay, sounds good. Where do we start the vision?
Speaker 1Let's do that. The grand vision. What was the original concept for the Harmon?
Speaker 2Well, it was definitely impressive on paper A 49-story tower 49, okay. Designed by a very well-regarded architectural firm, foster Plus Partners, big name.
Speaker 1A very big name.
Speaker 2And it wasn't just going to be a hotel the plans also included high-end residential condo units.
Speaker 1Ah, okay, so hotel and living space.
Grand Vision and Fatal Flaws
Speaker 2Right. It was really positioned to be a focal point, a real standout feature within that huge city center development.
Speaker 1You can easily imagine the buzz around that. 49 stories Foster Plus Partners design heart of Vegas. What went wrong? How did this glittering idea turn into a building that never saw a single guest check in?
Speaker 2Well, the turning point seems to have been around 2008, during construction. Ok what happened Routine inspections basically but they uncovered some pretty significant structural problems.
Speaker 1Structural problems.
Speaker 2Specifically issues with the steel reinforcement. You know the rebar.
Speaker 1Uh-huh, the steel bars inside the concrete Crucial stuff.
Speaker 2Absolutely critical and the report said it had been installed improperly.
Speaker 1Improperly installed rebar.
Speaker 2That sounds serious, not like a minor detail.
Speaker 1No, far from it, and what's really striking is the scale they reported. It wasn't just like one or two spots.
Speaker 2How widespread was it.
Speaker 1The information suggests that 15 of the 22 floors they built at that time were affected 15 floors Wow. Yeah, and the engineering assessments concluded that, because of this, the building wouldn't be able to withstand a major earthquake.
Speaker 2OK, that is profoundly serious, especially for a tower that size in an area that does have seismic activity.
Speaker 1Definitely A catastrophic finding, really.
Speaker 2So what was the immediate fallout from that discovery Must have been huge. It was swift, yeah, and pretty drastic. Construction was stopped, immediately halted.
Speaker 1Stopped building.
Speaker 2Uh-huh, and the original plan, the full 49 stories, that was abandoned.
Speaker 1Scrapped.
Speaker 2Completely. The whole residential condo idea was canceled too. The building eventually topped out at a much shorter height, only 28 stories 28 instead of 49.
Speaker 1But I understand they did finish the outside the exterior.
Speaker 2They did and that created this really bizarre situation visually.
Speaker 1How so.
Speaker 2Because from the outside the 28-story Harmon looked well finished. It visually fit in with the rest of city center Gleaming glass facade, modern lines.
Speaker 1But inside.
Speaker 2Completely empty for years. Imagine no furniture, no fixtures, no people, no activity, just this finished shell.
Speaker 1A vacant modern monument right there on the strip. I heard someone call it a peculiar monument to what might have been that really captures it.
Speaker 2I think the strangeness of it all so it's sitting there, structurally compromised.
Speaker 1What happened next?
Speaker 2did they try to fix it or well, that's where things got even more complicated. The discovery of the flaw is basically kicked off a massive legal battle ah, the, the lawsuits. Exactly Perini Building Company they were the general contractor sued MGM Resorts for unpaid bills, claiming MGM owed them something like $492 million.
Speaker 1Nearly half a billion dollars. Wow, and I'm guessing MGM didn't just write a check.
Speaker 2Not quite. They countersued Perini.
Speaker 1On what grounds?
Speaker 2Poor workmanship, Essentially saying these structural problems are your fault.
Speaker 1Okay, so contractor blames owner, owner blames contractor Classic.
Speaker 2Pretty much, and this legal fight just dragged on For several years.
Speaker 1Leaving the Harmon building in limbo the whole time.
Speaker 2Exactly, its fate was just hanging in the balance while the lawyers argued.
Speaker 1So during that legal fight were there any serious efforts to like repair the structural issues, or was that off the table?
Speaker 2Well, the engineering assessments were pretty bleak. The conclusion was that the problems were just too extensive, meaning that fixing it to make it safe for people to actually use it wasn't considered a viable option, too complex, too costly, maybe just impossible.
Speaker 1So if fixing it wasn't on the cards, what was?
Speaker 2Demolition. That became the only realistic path forward, based on the safety concerns.
Speaker 1Demolition. You know Vegas is famous for its implosions, big spectacles. Did they do that with the Harmon?
Speaker 2No, they couldn't. I remember reading about that too. Implosion wasn't an option here.
Speaker 1Why not.
Speaker 2It was just too close to all the other buildings in city center Aria, vidara, the shops.
Speaker 1Right, the risk of collateral damage would have been huge.
Speaker 2Exactly far too risky, so they had to go with a different method.
Speaker 1Which was.
Speaker 2Much slower, much more painstaking. They had to dismantle it.
Speaker 1Dismantle, you mean take it apart piece by piece.
Speaker 2Yes, floor by floor, section by section.
Speaker 1Oh man, A 28-story glass building. Taking it apart like that sounds like a logistical nightmare and expensive.
Speaker 2It was definitely both. The whole dismantling process took over a year.
Speaker 1All year.
Speaker 2Mm-hmm and cost another $11.5 million on top of everything else already spent.
Speaker 1Just to get rid of it. What about the lawsuit? How did that end?
Speaker 2They eventually settled In 2014,. Mgm and Perini reached an agreement.
Speaker 1What was the outcome?
Speaker 2MGM ended up paying Perini $153 million less than Perini originally sued for, but still a very significant amount.
Speaker 1And by then the building was coming down.
Speaker 2Yeah, by August 2015,. The Harmon Hotel was completely gone, just an empty plot of land left behind.
Speaker 1Incredible Hundreds of millions invested, years of work, legal battles and it all ends with an empty lot. So, moving beyond the sheer drama of it, what are the bigger lessons here?
Speaker 2What really went wrong at the core? Well, what's insightful, I think, is that it wasn't like one single big, dramatic blow up Right.
Speaker 1No fire, no natural disaster.
Speaker 2No, the analysis points towards underappreciated mistakes and inadequate oversight. A series of smaller things, perhaps adding up.
Speaker 1Which sounds less dramatic but maybe more insidious.
Speaker 2Possibly. It's definitely a powerful reminder, isn't it? Even in Vegas, the city of spectacle and speed, you absolutely cannot neglect the fundamentals.
Speaker 1Attention to detail.
Learning from Failure
Speaker 2Meticulous attention, especially on something this complex. The sheer number of floors affected by the rebar issue it really suggests there might have been deeper problems.
Speaker 1Like what Communication Training?
Speaker 2Could be any of those. Or maybe just intense pressure to keep things moving fast, you know cutting corners on quality control. Perhaps it makes you wonder about the whole project culture.
Speaker 1It's definitely a cautionary tale.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1Especially for cities or developers pushing for really rapid, large-scale projects.
Speaker 2Absolutely.
Speaker 1So what kind of oversight specifically might have been lacking? Was it not enough inspections? Were the inspectors not thorough enough? What does adequate oversight even look like on a billion-dollar project like CityCenter?
Speaker 2Those are the key questions, aren't they? The Harmon story really throws a spotlight on the risks of what's been called a surfeit of ambition coupled with a lack of regard for detail.
Speaker 1Too much big picture, not enough focus on the small stuff.
Speaker 2Potentially, especially in those critical construction and project management phases, and the results, as we saw, can be just disastrous financially and for your reputation.
Speaker 1Yeah, a PR nightmare on top of the financial ruin.
Speaker 2Definitely. This case really drives home how important robust quality control is at every single stage.
Speaker 1From the blueprint to the final bolt.
Speaker 2Exactly. You need clear responsibilities, you need rigorous maybe independent checks, and you need a culture that values getting it right over, just getting it done fast.
Speaker 1It's such an irony, isn't it? It was meant to be this showpiece of innovation, right, but instead it became like a textbook example of needing the basics, good planning, good inspections and valuing quality over speed.
Speaker 2That sums it up pretty well. It shows that the greatest idea in the world, it doesn't mean much if the execution isn't sound.
Speaker 1The nuts and bolts matter.
Speaker 2They really do. Ambition is great, but it needs that foundation of accuracy, honesty, integrity in the actual work.
Speaker 1So wrapping up the Harmon's story then, yeah. It really is an extraordinary and, frankly, cautionary tale in the world of high stakes real estate.
Speaker 2Absolutely unparalleled in some ways.
Speaker 1I mean $275 million that was the reported investment sunk into a building that never served a single customer.
Speaker 2Just staggering. It really highlights the colossal financial risk when oversight fails on these mega projects.
Speaker 1And even though Vegas is always changing, always building something new, it's the city of reinvention, yeah. The memory, or maybe the specter, as some put it, of that failed glass tower lingers A quiet reminder.
Speaker 2It does, a reminder of what can happen when things go wrong behind the shiny facade.
Speaker 1And what's there now on that spot where the Harmon stood?
Speaker 2Something much more modest. Yeah, it's a four-story retail complex, now called 63.
Speaker 1Four stories instead of 49. Quite a difference.
Speaker 2A very different scale, a very different ambition. So yeah, the Harmon building is long gone, but its story, that mix of huge ambition, critical failure and that massive price tag that's definitely cemented in Vegas history.
Speaker 1Okay, so just to recap this deep dive for you listening, we've walked through the story of the Harmon Hotel in Las Vegas. It started as this incredibly ambitious, high-end landmark within city center.
Legacy of an Empty Tower
Speaker 2But critical flaws, specifically with that rebar installation, were found during construction.
Speaker 1Right. That discovery halted everything, led to years of complex legal battles between the developer MGM and the contractor Perini.
Speaker 2And ultimately, the building was deemed unsafe and had to be painstakingly dismantled without ever opening its doors.
Speaker 1The core lesson really sticking out here is just how vital that meticulous attention to detail and rigorous oversight are, even maybe especially on the biggest, most glamorous projects.
Speaker 2Which brings us to a final thought, something for you to chew on.
Speaker 1Okay.
Speaker 2In a world that really celebrates, you know, the grand vision, the big idea, the fast progress, how do we actually make sure that the essential groundwork gets the attention it needs?
Speaker 1The unglamorous stuff.
Speaker 2Exactly. How do we prevent these kinds of silent failures, not just in construction, but maybe in other complex fields too? How do we ensure those foundations are strong enough to hold up whatever ambitious towers we're trying to build on top?