Development on the Las Vegas Strip Entrepreneur
Sheldon G. Adelson and his partners Richard Katzeff, Irwin Chafetz, Ted Cutler, and Jordan Shapiro bought the
Sands Hotel and Casino in 1989. Adelson and his partners financed their venture with investments in personal computers and trade shows, founding the computer trade show
COMDEX in 1979. They opened the 1.2 million square foot
Sands Expo and Convention Center, then the largest privately owned convention facility in the world, across from the hotel in 1990. The Sands Hotel was unable to compete with newer resorts on the
Las Vegas Strip and was demolished to make room for
The Venetian. Construction of the Venetian began in 1997, funded by Adelson's sale of COMDEX. Modeled on Venice, Italy, it joined the ranks of themed hotels such as
Excalibur,
New York-New York, and
Paris Las Vegas on the Las Vegas Strip. In 2004, Las Vegas Sands, Inc. went public, The 43-story unfinished condominium skyscraper St. Regis Residences at the Venetian Palazzo is on the same campus. Construction halted in 2008 due to company financial issues. The 2008 financial crisis forced Adelson to invest $1 billion of his own capital to keep the Las Vegas Sands in business, much of which the company spent developing event spaces and high-end retail stores in their properties By 2011, the Las Vegas Sands Corp.'s main profits came from renting convention space.
Expansion into Asia The company soon recognized new commercial opportunities in Asia, specifically in
Macau, the only Special Administrative Region of China where gambling is legal. Las Vegas Sands Corp., along with
Wynn Resorts and
Galaxy Entertainment Group, was one of the first to be granted a casino operating concession. Sands Macao resort, Macau's first American-operated casino, opened in 2004. Las Vegas Sands Corp.'s future Macau properties were largely in
Cotai, a district of reclaimed land created through public works projects and designated for hotels and casinos. The
Venetian Macao, the second-largest in the world at 550,000 square feet, opened in 2007. In 2008, Las Vegas Sands opened a Four Seasons hotel adjacent to the Venetian Macao. It was followed by The Londoner Macao, originally branded Sands Cotai Central, and The Parisian Macao. Development plans proceeded in 2010 for
Marina Bay Sands resort in Singapore, at $5.6 billion the most expensive hotel and casino ever built. The resort was designed by Israeli-Canadian architect
Moshe Safdie and is composed of three 57-story towers connected at the top by a 3-acre SkyPark(R). The integrated resort was the second built in Singapore after
Resorts World Sentosa. Eight months after opening, Marina Bay Sands set a record for posting a $600 million operating profit. In September 2012, the Las Vegas Sands Corp. announced that
Madrid had been chosen as destination for a casino resort project dubbed
EuroVegas in an attempt to expand outside of Asia. In February 2013, the company named the town of
Alcorcón, on the outskirts of Madrid, as the site for the EuroVegas project. Plans included six casinos, twelve hotels, a convention center, three golf courses, shopping centers, bars, and restaurants, and was expected to take 10 years to build. In December 2013 the EuroVegas project was officially canceled.
Recent history In 2015, the Las Vegas Sands Corp. and California-based co-developer California-based
Majestic Realty Co. proposed a $1.2 billion
65,000-seat stadium located near The Strip for the
Oakland Raiders football team. The proposal required $420 million from private investors and $780 million in public funding, primarily from tourism. Despite Las Vegas Sands withdrawing from the project, the Raiders eventually moved into the stadium after relocating from Oakland. In May 2019, the company sold Sands Bethlehem to the
Poarch Band of Creek Indians for $1.3 billion, and it was renamed
Wind Creek Bethlehem. Las Vegas Sands was one of multiple bidders trying to open a commercial casino in
Downstate New York. Las Vegas Sands had proposed building
Sands New York, an
integrated resort at the
Nassau Coliseum site in
Uniondale, New York, but withdrew their bid in April of 2025 due to the threat of New York legalizing online gambling. In the event that the state of
Texas legalizes casinos, Las Vegas Sands hopes to build an
integrated resort in
Irving at the former site of
Texas Stadium. Following backlash towards the project, Sands withdrew the casino component of the project. Las Vegas Sands confirmed that they are interested in developing an integrated resort in
Thailand following the withdrawal of the
Entertainment Complex Bill but stated that Thailand needed a clear framework if they were to legalize gambling. In July 2025, Las Vegas Sands broke ground on an expansion of the
Marina Bay Sands in
Singapore which will be completed by 2031. The expansion will include a separate fourth hotel tower, an arena and added convention space. In February 2026, Las Vegas Sands announced the appointment of Patrick Dumont as its new CEO and chairman, ahead of Robert Goldstein stepping down. == Finances ==