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On March 11, 2005, Centra Properties announced that it had closed escrow on the 996-unit Harbor Island apartments, as well as 14 four-plex buildings, all located on 25 acres of land on Harmon Avenue, east of the Aladdin resort on the Las Vegas Strip and adjacent to the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino. The cost of the property totaled $85 million.
The Harmon was planned as a non-gaming hotel and condominium high-rise, with 400 rooms and 207 condo units. [2] It was designed by Foster and Partners, and was built on the Las Vegas Strip at the intersection of Harmon Avenue. [3] [4] The Harmon, planned as part of the CityCenter project by MGM Mirage and Dubai World, [3] was announced in ...
The project was to include 4,000 sq ft (370 m 2) of ground-level retail space. [153] The property was purchased in January 2004, at a cost of $1.2 million. [154] The project's general contractor was Breslin Builders. [152] Digging for the building's support columns began in July 2004. Construction was expected to cost $60 million. [155]
Approximately 370 apartments and 35 for-sale townhomes. A “high-end organic” supermarket and handful of other shops. 520 spaces in a parking deck not visible from the road.
The resort is located on 16.7 acres (6.8 ha) [1] on the corner of Harmon Avenue and Paradise Road, about a mile east of the Las Vegas Strip. [2] At the time of its closure, the Hard Rock included 1,506 rooms across several hotel towers, a 61,704-square-foot (5,732.5 m 2) casino, and a music venue known as The Joint.
Harmon Corner is located on the Las Vegas Strip, at the northeast corner of South Las Vegas Boulevard and Harmon Avenue. Development group BPS Partners purchased the vacant 2.17-acre (0.88 ha) property from Clark County, Nevada in February 2010, at a cost of $25 million.
Harmon Meadow also known as "The Plaza at Harmon Meadow", a commercial complex in New Jersey The Harmon Building, in Las Vegas, Nevada William E. Harmon Foundation , a non-profit known for its support and patronage of African-American artists during the first half of the 20th century
Teri Karush Roger of The New York Times stated "The book, which took Mr. Gross a year and a half to research and write, is meant to "trace the broad strokes of who is making the most money in the country at any point in the last 100 years," he said, "and who is using it in essence to show off, which is ultimately what apartments at 740 have become". [2]