Mesa is doubtful the long-delayed Gaylord resort will be built after learning the hotel developer is selling its brand to lodging giant Marriott International Inc.
Mesa Mayor Scott Smith said Friday that hopes recently dimmed for the $800 million resort when Gaylord Entertainment Co. opened itself to a takeover.
“It doesn’t look very positive for Mesa based on the new business plan,” Smith said. “This is not a total surprise because the economy had taken a beating not only on Gaylord but on the entire lodging industry in the Phoenix/Mesa/Scottsdale market.”
Nashville-based Gaylord announced plans to sell its four massive resorts to Marriott for $210 million and said in a statement that it “will no longer view large scale development as a means for growth.”
Gaylord said it would stop plans for a new resort in Aurora, Colo., which had become a higher priority than the Arizona expansion. Gaylord did not mention the Mesa resort in its announcement.
Gaylord Vice President Brian Abrahamson on Friday said he didn’t have further details about Mesa but that he expected details will emerge as plans evolve for a restructuring that will be complete Jan. 1. Shareholders still need to approve the plan.
Gaylord intends to become a real estate investment trust with a focus on operating hotels smaller than the resorts it now owns. Gaylord has resorts in or near Nashville, Dallas, Orlando and Washington, D.C.
Gaylord won voter approval in 2009 for an incentive package to build a resort of up to 1,500 rooms at Eastmark, which is being developed by Scottsdale-based DMB Associates at the former General Motors Proving Grounds. It would have been Arizona’s largest resort and was projected to attract 1 million visitors a year and trigger adjacent development.
Smith said Gaylord probably hasn’t reached a definitive decision on the Mesa resort. He gathered the company’s transition still has a lot of loose ends based on voice mails he exchanged with executives after the Thursday announcement.
“Their day, as you can imagine, was very, very hectic,” Smith said.
He expects to have an extended conversation soon. Smith said Eastmark will remain a strong project even if Gaylord falls through. He believes the area is a logical place for a resort given its proximity to the Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport and a growing employment base.
“Obviously not having Gaylord is a disappointment, but it’s not the only game in town,” Smith said.
Contact writer: (480) 898-6548 or ggroff@evtrib.com










Leon Ceniceros posted at 6:18 pm on Fri, Jun 1, 2012.
Just more "pie in the sky" rhetoric from ........Mesa City Hall.
A Metro Line to "nowhere" (Downtown Mesa).
A $100 Million Dollar Cubs Stadium that looks almost exactly like the Stadium they used to play in except just 20% bigger with a ......26 ACRE ........"LAWN".
A failed "alternate energy" employement/jobs push that was blown out of the water by the Chinese "pennies an hour wages".
The continuing "Keep on Digging the Hole...deeper...deeper" ...Fiesta Mall/Southern Avenue Debacle.....$10 Milion Dollars thrown at the problem here.....$15 Million Dollars there............LIPSTICK ON A PIG.
Hundreds of thousands of dollars for ........BUS STOPS FROM HOLLYWOOD = BEAUTIFUL FOR THE DRIVER FROM "LAS SENDAS" TO LOOK AT WHILE THEY DRIVE TO ASU STADIUM...........BUT VERY LITTLE SHADE FOR THE ILLEGAL ALIEN/POOR COMMUTER WHO HAS TO STAND IN 120DEGREE HEAT WAITING FOR HIS WHEELS TO GET HIM/HER TO THEIR MINIMUM WAGE JOB.
mesateacher posted at 8:42 pm on Sun, Jun 3, 2012.
And don't forget the Waveyard amusement park promised years ago!
renew21 posted at 11:52 am on Mon, Jun 4, 2012.
Yes, but how much of these dream developments wasted taxpayer dollars? I remember Waveyard paid for the vote. Im happy that it did not get off the ground and go into bankruptcy. Have you looked at all the empty buildings in Vegas area? Then its an eyesore that just sits there. Mesa needs a huge resort such as Gaylord. Lets see if things turn around and if DMB sticks with the plans to build a resort hotel at that location or just do the same ol thing by building more homes. I am guessing the later.