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This document provides an analysis of gaming demand in Las Vegas, breaking it down into four primary sources: leisure, local, tour/travel, and convention. It details statistics for each segment, such as the percentage of visitors who gamble, the economic impact of tourism, and the growth in convention attendance. The analysis indicates that while leisure and tourism are enormous contributors, convention demand is also significant and growing, and local demand has a more moderate impact.
This document is a gaming demand analysis for the Las Vegas Strip, presenting annual data from 1996 to 2014 for casinos earning over $72 million. It tracks key metrics like total win, number of gaming units, and win per unit per day (WPUPD). The document itself, bearing the identifier HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018787, does not contain any direct information related to Jeffrey Epstein or his associates.
This document is a 'Gaming Supply Analysis' providing a competitive summary of Las Vegas Strip casinos as of year-end 2014. It lists 24 casino properties with details on their owners, number of rooms, casino square footage, gaming devices, and table games. The document is marked with the identifier 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018786' but contains no direct references to Jeffrey Epstein or related individuals.
This document provides an analysis of supply and demand in the gaming industry, using Las Vegas as a primary example. It explains that unlike traditional economics, the price variable in gaming is consumer-determined and quantified by a metric called "win per unit per day" (WPUPD), which is correlated with the available gaming inventory. The analysis also considers economic, demographic, and seasonal factors to forecast gaming revenue.
This document is a comparative analysis of five luxury resorts and casinos in Las Vegas: Aria, Bellagio, The Cosmopolitan, Venetian/Pallazzo, and Wynn/Encore. It provides a detailed breakdown of hotel, casino, retail, and entertainment statistics for the year 2014, including owners, revenue figures, and key retail tenants. Although requested in the context of an Epstein-related analysis, the document itself contains no direct mentions of Jeffrey Epstein or his known associates; its relevance may stem from its origin as an exhibit in a U.S. House Oversight Committee investigation, as indicated by the Bates number 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018784'.
This document provides an overview of the competitive landscape for luxury resort hotels in Las Vegas. It lists recently opened properties like Aria, Cosmopolitan, and The Cromwell, and details upcoming developments such as Resorts World Las Vegas and Alon, noting they will add 4,000 high-end rooms to the market.
This document is a statistical report titled 'Las Vegas Resort Hotel Market', providing an analysis of the Las Vegas lodging market from 1985 to 2015. It contains a detailed table with annual data on room inventory, hotel and motel occupancy rates, and total rooms occupied. Despite the prompt's request to analyze an 'Epstein-related document', the content of this specific page contains no information about Jeffrey Epstein or any related individuals or activities.
This document, labeled 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018781', is a page from a market analysis report for a site on the Las Vegas Strip. It details the flexible zoning regulations of the Gaming Enterprise District (GED) and provides key Las Vegas tourism and financial statistics for 2014. The document contains no mention of Jeffrey Epstein, his known associates, or any related activities; its content is strictly focused on Las Vegas real estate and market data.
This document provides information about the Las Vegas Monorail, a six-stop elevated train system on a 3.9-mile route. It details the monorail's path, capacity, and ridership, and includes a map showing the current route, stations, nearby hotels and attractions, and a proposed future expansion.
This document, labeled 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018778', is an informational page about the expansion and passenger traffic at McCarran International Airport, focusing on 2014 statistics. It details a $3.5 billion expansion, a total of 42.9 million passengers in 2014, and the airport's ranking as one of the busiest in the world. Despite the user's prompt, this document contains no information whatsoever related to Jeffrey Epstein, his associates, finances, or travel.
This document summarizes three major real estate development projects in Las Vegas with timelines from 2015 to 2018. It details the costs, sizes, and features of the All Net Resort Arena ($1.4B), the Mandalay Bay Convention Center expansion ($66M), and the Shops at Tropicana ($100M). Although submitted as an Epstein-related document, this specific page contains no explicit mentions of Jeffrey Epstein or his known associates; its potential relevance may stem from its inclusion in a U.S. House Oversight Committee investigation, as indicated by the bates stamp.
This document, labeled HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018776, provides a descriptive overview of three major entertainment and retail developments in Las Vegas. It details The Arena (an MGM/AEG project), The Grand Bazaar Shops (at Bally's), and City of Rock (an MGM venue for Rock in Rio), including their costs, features, locations, and opening timelines from 2014 to 2016. The document does not contain any names of individuals or any direct references to Jeffrey Epstein.
This document provides an overview of three significant construction projects in Las Vegas. It details the Resorts World Las Vegas mega-resort, the Wyndham Desert Blue Time Share property, and The Park by MGM, an outdoor entertainment and dining district. The descriptions include project scope, key features, timelines, and locations.
This document is a table titled 'FUTURE DEVELOPMENT' that summarizes major construction, renovation, and redevelopment projects in Las Vegas and Henderson for the years 2016 and 2018. It lists each project's cost (totaling over $6.1 billion) and its scheduled completion date. The document, marked 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018774', contains no information or mentions related to Jeffrey Epstein, his known associates, or his activities.
This document is a market analysis report detailing recent property developments on the Las Vegas Strip for the years 2013, 2014, and 2015. It includes a table listing properties, their development costs in millions, physical dimensions (convention space, rooms), and completion dates. The document, marked 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018773', does not contain any direct references to Jeffrey Epstein, his associates, or related entities.
This document, page 30 of a report labeled 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018772', details major convention space development in Las Vegas circa 2015. It describes the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority's (LVCVA) $2.5 billion expansion project, which includes the acquisition of the Riviera hotel, projecting an increase of 500,000 annual visitors. The document's content is strictly focused on real estate development, economic growth, and tourism statistics in Las Vegas and contains no names, events, or information related to Jeffrey Epstein.
This document is a statistical report page detailing convention attendance in Las Vegas from 1983 to 2014. It includes a table with annual visitor totals and percentage changes, sourced from the LVCVA, and notes the planned expansion of the Las Vegas Convention Center. Despite the user's query, the document contains no information, names, or events related to Jeffrey Epstein.
This document presents a table detailing the tourism impact on Las Vegas from 1988 to 2014. It includes annual data on total visitors, total visitor revenue, and revenue per visitor, along with their respective year-over-year percentage changes. The table also provides the average annual percentage change for these key metrics over the entire period.
This document, page 27 of a file marked HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018769, provides an overview of Las Vegas as a convention hub and lists major trade shows scheduled for 2015-2016. It details over 30 events, including dates and attendee numbers, and states the total annual non-gaming economic impact is approximately $8.0 billion. The document itself makes no mention of Jeffrey Epstein or related individuals, though it does list the National Business Aviation Association (NBAA) convention, an industry Epstein was involved in.
This document is a single page from a report, identified by the Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018768', detailing the world's 30 largest hotels and resorts. It highlights the dominance of Las Vegas, noting that it has the world's largest supply of hotel rooms and that 17 of the top 30 resorts are located there. The document contains no mention of Jeffrey Epstein, his associates, or any related activities, and its relevance to the Epstein case is not apparent from its content.
This document is page 25 of a report, identified by the footer 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018767', providing a general overview of Las Vegas as a tourist destination. It describes the city's economy, the central role of 'the Strip', and provides tourism statistics, noting 41.1 million visitors in 2014 with a projection of 42 million for 2015. The document itself does not contain any direct mentions of Jeffrey Epstein or related individuals, events, or activities.
This document is an architectural concept plan, dated July 15, 2001, for a massive Las Vegas development called "World Port Resorts." The plan, created by the firm Hart Howerton, outlines a project with 9,360 hotel rooms and 350,000 sq. ft. of commercial space. The document itself makes no mention of Jeffrey Epstein or any known associates; its potential relevance is suggested by the document ID "HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018764", indicating it is part of a larger government file.
This document outlines the FAA-approved building height allowances for a specific site on the Las Vegas Boulevard, ranging from 505 feet at the front and decreasing to 354 feet on the eastern side. It also notes that in March 2011, the Clark County Board of County Commissioners approved the development of a 500-foot observation wheel and retail/convention space on 10 acres of this site.
This document provides a zoning description and map for a specific site in Las Vegas. The site is zoned H-1 and falls within the MUD-1 Mixed-Use Overlay District, which allows for high-density, mixed-use, high-rise projects such as casino resorts. A map illustrates the site's location relative to the Las Vegas Strip, I-15, and surrounding properties.
This document is a real estate analysis of a 38.475-acre property on the Las Vegas Strip, identified by the footer 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018759'. It details the site's location, current tenants providing ~$500,000 in income, and a previously halted 'Skyvue' ferris wheel project from August 2012. The document highlights the property's strategic location adjacent to major resorts and, notably, private and high-roller jet terminals for McCarran Airport and the Las Vegas Sands Corp.
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