Gran Scala is in competition with Expo Zaragoza 2008
Gran Scala – Spain’s new Las Vegas

Thanks to the EU’s structural aid, the region is able to finance a local development strategy. ‘Between 2007 and 2013 there will be around twenty cutting-edge projects in Aragon,’ it says on the Aragonese internet site on the topic of rural advancement. Yet an enterprise for regional development such as this hardly seems compatible with the construction of an amusement park.

Desert landscape of Los Monegros (Photo: Estrella Esteve/ Flickr)
Before Los Monegros was chosen, both Valence in south-eastern France as well as Dubai stood as possible locations for a second ‘Las Vegas’. Due to lack of interest from investors these options were knocked on the head, according to a statement from the ILD.
Persuasive figures
32 casinos, 70 hotels, 232 restaurants, 500 shops, a hippodrome, a golf course, quite a few parks, museums and other attractions should create 65, 000 new jobs in the region even before 2015. That, at least, is what the ‘Gran Scala’ project is trying to do. Investments should increase to 17 billion euros, which would double the brand since the 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona. 677 million EUR would go on taxes in the region, and a further billion would go on state finance.
The Aragonese government and Los Monegros’ mayor welcome the enterprise. Nevertheless, dissenters are coming forward. They claim that information on such crucial topics as the exact location for a complex of over two thousand hectares, plus the resulting issues of water and energy supply is too obscure, is too flimsy. Many locals question the sustainability of the project. Also, accusations of corruption have arisen due to the autonomous administration’s intensive support of the project.
In recent months, citizen action groups have emerged on the web (including ‘Stop Gran Scala’, Los Monegros No se Venden aka ‘the inhabitants of Los Monegros cannot be bought’, docentes contra Gran Scala or ‘lecturers against Gran Scala), all demanding altogether more transparency and more precise information. These initiatives also call for a report on socioeconomic, cultural and environmental factors. Mainly, however, the Aragonese government has been criticised for altering urban development legislation to fit the requirements of the Gran Scala project.
Not a safe bet
Still, nothing is known about how the government will supply water and energy to a complex that attracts more than 25 million tourists per year. Critics express their doubt that the ILD consortium has sufficient resources for the realisation of its desired goals. With a capital of £50,000, everything depends upon the goodwill of private investors, according to José Luis Martínez, spokesperson of the ‘Stop Gran Scala’ platform.
This blend of family park and adult amusement park, however, doesn’t really convince. A hybrid of Las Vegas and Orlando within the same complex? ‘Stop Gran Scala’ also seems to be apprehensive about the fact that the amusement industry could attract organised crime to the region.
Environmentally feasible?
For almost twenty years, Los Monegros has been considered a candidate for the creation of a national park. There are lots of salt water lagoons and ponds throughout the Alcubierre desert, plus the Ebro river, Gallego and Cinca that together form the largest endorheic zone in Europe. Ecologistas en Acción (‘Ecologists in Action’), opponents to Gran Scala, are the loudest applicants to the National Park candidacy. ‘This project is not in line with the European standards for environmental protection and the battle against climate change,’ says Chesús Ferrer, spokesperson of the NGO in Aragon. ‘In order to satisfy the energy demands of such a city, heat power plants would have to be constructed, and private traffic would increase – all factors that will lead to a considerable increase of the CO2 emissions. If ‘Gran Scala’ is implemented as planned, one can assume that this city’s emissions will account for approximately 6 % of the national CO2 output. Lee más »
Los casinos de Gran Scala seran idóneos para blanquear dinero;)

Casinos Gran Scala, 18 mar (EFECOM).- La criminóloga y experta en blanqueo de dinero y mafia organizada Alejandra Gómez alertó hoy del “efecto llamada” que conllevaría la construcción de 32 casinos en el complejo Gran Scala, unas instalaciones “perfectas” para blanquear capitales procedente de actividades como el narcotráfico o el terrorismo.
La construcción del macro proyecto Gran Scala, que contempla la creación de una treintena de casinos en la comarca de Los Monegros (Huesca), sería “sin duda” un “gran lugar” para todas aquellas personas que necesitan “disfrazar el origen ilícito de sus ganancias”, indicó hoy en Zaragoza esta experta.
Gran Scala, que previsiblemente se comenzará a construir a principios de 2009, se configura como la segunda mayor oferta mundial de juego, solo por detrás de Las Vegas, con 32 casinos, 70 hoteles, 232 restaurantes, medio millar de comercios, un hipódromo, un campo de golf y varios parques de atracciones y museos, en una superficie superior a las 2.000 hectáreas
González, miembro del Instituto Andaluz de Criminología y que ha trabajado en varios proyectos de Naciones Unidas sobre esta temática, comparó este proyecto con Las Vegas, una ciudad en la que se ha tardado cerca de 40 años en “erradicar” el poder de las mafias italianas y que actualmente “sigue siendo un gran conducto de blanqueo de capitales”.
También sería “interesante”, a juicio de González, tener en cuenta el “papel protagonista” que ocupa España en el mercado de la cocaína, ya que es el principal país europeo por el que se introduce esta droga, así como el hachís, en el que ocupa el primer puesto a nivel mundial, dos actividades que precisan blanquear sus ganancias.
Por otro lado, la normativa contra el blanqueo de capitales, “si bien se ha mejorado mucho en los últimos años, todavía deja mucho que desear”, indicó esta experta, quien recordó que de los 39 grandes casinos españoles, sólo tres informaron entre 2005 y 2006 sobre transacciones sospechosas superiores a 3.000 euros en sus instalaciones, cuando esta cantidad se rebasa habitualmente, subrayó.
En cuanto a la normativa europea vigente, España ha desarrollado en su legislación la Directiva Marco para la Prevención del Blanqueo de Capitales, aunque hasta ahora no se tiene “constancia de su eficacia”.
Un estudio elaborado en 2006 en más de 3.000 municipios en Estados Unidos probó “la relación entre la existencia de casinos y el alza de la delincuencia”, así como que el tipo de clientela que atrae los casinos “son gente que, o bien son propensos a ser víctimas de delitos o a cometerlos”.
Puso como ejemplo el Mall of America, en el estado de Minessota, el centro de ocio más visitado de Estados Unidos con 38 millones de visitas al año, ocho millones más que Las Vegas (Nevada), donde los niveles de delincuencia “son mucho mayores” a pesar de contar con menos afluencia de visitantes, una cuestión a tener en cuenta de cara a una política de seguridad.
“La delincuencia no se importa de las ciudades próximas a casinos, sino que es el propio casino el que genera delincuencia”, reseñó la experta. EFECOM
ILD to bring world of football to Gran Scala in Spain

As a result of this agreement, Market Sport, a Spanish company headquartered in Barcelona, will develop one of the most exciting theme parks to be located at the new development.
Sergi Gros, CEO of Market Sport signed the agreement with ILD last month. It is expected that the company will begin work on the park before summer 2009. ILD director Sebastien Tranchant commented: “We are very pleased with the agreement we have reached with Market Sport and even more so in light of their passion for the project.”
The Gran Scala project in Spain received a special award at the Andalusian Gaming Fair due to the scale and importance of the project and the anticipated national and international interest the project is likely to generate.
Accepting the award on behalf of ILD, director Paul Stéphane Allegrini said: “We are very proud to been presented with this award. It is a great honour to have the scale and magnitude of the Gran Scala project acknowledged even before it becomes a reality.”









