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The Next Summerlin: Where the Valley’s Next Big Luxury Development is Hiding

By Matthias Binder April 12, 2026
The Next Summerlin: Where the Valley's Next Big Luxury Development is Hiding
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Summerlin didn’t become the valley’s gold standard overnight. It took decades of deliberate planning, strong developer discipline, and a location that felt slightly too far west – until, suddenly, it wasn’t. That same arc is now playing out in several corners of the Las Vegas Valley, and the question worth asking is simple: where does the next great master-planned community quietly take root?

Contents
Summerlin’s Own Story Is Not Over YetCadence in Henderson: The Strongest Challenger on the BoardSkye Summit: The Northwest’s Most Ambitious New EntryThe North Las Vegas Wildcard: 7,000 Acres of Blank CanvasHylo Park: The Urban Mixed-Use Model for North Las VegasUnCommons and the Southwest’s Quiet RiseSymphony Park and the Urban Luxury Vertical PlayMarket Rankings Tell the Story of Where the Valley Is HeadingThe Land Constraint: Why the Race MattersWhat Makes the “Next Summerlin” Actually Possible

The answer is more complicated – and more interesting – than most people realize. Several serious contenders are already in motion, backed by real land, real developers, and real demand from a region that keeps absorbing new residents at a pace that surprises even longtime observers.

Summerlin’s Own Story Is Not Over Yet

Summerlin's Own Story Is Not Over Yet (Image Credits: Pexels)
Summerlin’s Own Story Is Not Over Yet (Image Credits: Pexels)

Before looking for what’s next, it helps to understand where Summerlin currently stands. Today, Summerlin is home to 127,000 residents and is projected to reach approximately 200,000 once the master plan is complete. That’s still a significant amount of runway left. With approximately 4,000 acres left to develop in Summerlin, the community continues to look forward to a strong pace of development in 2025 despite fluctuations in the market.

Now entering its 35th year of development, Summerlin continued its remarkable, decades-long trajectory in 2024, with the residential sector seeing the opening of six new neighborhoods, the completion of three community parks, and the close-out of nine neighborhoods. Its thoughtful design includes over 150 miles of trails, more than 250 parks, and a variety of residential neighborhoods that cater to every lifestyle, from modern apartments to luxury estates. That depth of infrastructure is the real benchmark any challenger needs to eventually match.

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Cadence in Henderson: The Strongest Challenger on the Board

Cadence in Henderson: The Strongest Challenger on the Board (Image Credits: Pexels)
Cadence in Henderson: The Strongest Challenger on the Board (Image Credits: Pexels)

Cadence, a master-planned community located in Henderson, achieved its highest national ranking in history during 2024, reaching the lofty position of number three among all master-planned communities in the United States, according to rankings by RCLCO and John Burns Real Estate Consulting. That’s not a fluke. Cadence is 62 percent higher in sales than it was in the first half of 2023, which shows how strong the master plan has been in setting itself up for success with supply to meet demand for new homes.

Located in Henderson, Nevada, the Cadence master-planned community sits near the eastern portion of the city and when fully developed is expected to span approximately 2,200 acres. Local amenities include Central Park, a 50-acre park with walking trails, an amphitheater, playgrounds, splash pads, and other recreational features. Retail has been expanding steadily, with phased openings beginning in 2024 and continuing into 2025, including tenants such as Starbucks, Wells Fargo, and several dining options.

Skye Summit: The Northwest’s Most Ambitious New Entry

Skye Summit: The Northwest's Most Ambitious New Entry (Image Credits: Pexels)
Skye Summit: The Northwest’s Most Ambitious New Entry (Image Credits: Pexels)

Tucked at the end of Centennial Parkway and west of nearly everything in the valley will stand a new Las Vegas master-planned community named “Skye Summit,” which will be home to roughly 3,000 homes. Olympia Companies, the developer behind Skye Canyon, will be behind the project. That pedigree matters. Olympia has a track record of building full-service communities in the northwest valley.

At elevations upwards of 3,200 feet above sea level, the community is sure to offer striking views. Scheduled to break ground in 2025, Skye Summit is set to become a premier master-planned community, encompassing approximately 3,000 homes with a mix of luxury residences, parks, and retail spaces, all designed with a focus on sustainability and community engagement. The location places it further west than almost anywhere else in the valley proper.

The North Las Vegas Wildcard: 7,000 Acres of Blank Canvas

The North Las Vegas Wildcard: 7,000 Acres of Blank Canvas (Image Credits: Pixabay)
The North Las Vegas Wildcard: 7,000 Acres of Blank Canvas (Image Credits: Pixabay)

The most land-rich opportunity in the entire valley may be hiding in plain sight in the north. The 7,000 acres of land in the Tule Springs East area is set to be transferred to North Las Vegas and UNLV, with the city seeking input from Las Vegas Valley residents to create an area plan for the land located north of the VA Hospital and 215 Beltway. The sheer scale of this project dwarfs anything else currently being discussed in Southern Nevada.

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The area will be a joint venture from the city and UNLV, with the city controlling around 5,000 acres and UNLV a little over 2,000, with current plans to develop residential neighborhoods, a satellite UNLV campus, and a dedicated job creation zone. The proposed UNLV north campus alone covers a vast 2,085 acres, six times the size of UNLV’s Maryland Parkway campus. What’s missing right now is timing, as the land was once part of the Nellis Small Arms Range Annex and requires environmental remediation prior to conveyance because it contains contamination from previous military training exercises.

Hylo Park: The Urban Mixed-Use Model for North Las Vegas

Hylo Park: The Urban Mixed-Use Model for North Las Vegas (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Hylo Park: The Urban Mixed-Use Model for North Las Vegas (Image Credits: Unsplash)

While the Tule Springs East project is still in its planning phase, another North Las Vegas development is already off the ground. Developer Agora Realty is spearheading the Hylo Park project, envisioned as a walkable mixed-use residential community on the site of the old Texas Station and Fiesta Rancho. The $380 million project plans to offer a blend of amenities including a 175-room hotel, nearly 700 residential units, an ice rink, and a vocational school, with a 158,000-square-foot indoor multisport facility as its centerpiece.

Agora held a ceremonial groundbreaking in early 2025 for Hylo Park, a sprawling project designed to span 73 acres and bring retail space, athletic facilities, housing, and more to a stretch of the city previously home to two hotel-casinos along Rancho Drive. It won’t rival Summerlin in acreage, but as a walkable lifestyle hub it represents a genuinely different model of community building for the valley’s north side.

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UnCommons and the Southwest’s Quiet Rise

UnCommons and the Southwest's Quiet Rise (La Citta Vita, Flickr, CC BY-SA 2.0)
UnCommons and the Southwest’s Quiet Rise (La Citta Vita, Flickr, CC BY-SA 2.0)

Located in Spring Valley, UnCommons is a 40-acre mixed-use development that seamlessly integrates luxury residences, office spaces, and retail outlets. With over 800 residential units planned, including the Vestra and Domus apartments, UnCommons emphasizes walkability, green spaces, and a community-centric design. It’s smaller than a traditional master-planned community, but its urban density and proximity to the 215 corridor make it a compelling luxury option.

The Bend is a forthcoming mixed-use development in Southwest Las Vegas, envisioned as a vibrant community hub featuring retail, dining, and entertainment venues, aiming to cater to the growing demand for lifestyle-centric spaces in the region. Southwest Las Vegas has consistently attracted high-income households in search of newer infrastructure and better elevation, and these projects are a direct response to that pull.

Symphony Park and the Urban Luxury Vertical Play

Symphony Park and the Urban Luxury Vertical Play (Image Credits: Pexels)
Symphony Park and the Urban Luxury Vertical Play (Image Credits: Pexels)

Not every luxury development is about sprawling single-family neighborhoods on the valley’s edges. Downtown Las Vegas is quietly building upward. Symphony Park is making waves with its new Cello Towers, a 32-story luxury high-rise, the first of its kind in Las Vegas since 2008. Notable upcoming projects also include a dual-branded Marriott hotel featuring 441 rooms alongside the residential tower.

This kind of vertical luxury signals something important: not all future Summerlin-style demand will be satisfied by sprawling desert parcels. A segment of new residents, particularly remote workers and retirees relocating from coastal cities, are actively looking for walkable urban options. Developments like Midtown in the Arts District are leading the way in creating walkable, urban living spaces, with eco-luxury condos starting at $299,000 as well as micro-retail and biohacking facilities.

Market Rankings Tell the Story of Where the Valley Is Heading

Market Rankings Tell the Story of Where the Valley Is Heading (Image Credits: Pexels)
Market Rankings Tell the Story of Where the Valley Is Heading (Image Credits: Pexels)

Led by Cadence in east Henderson at number three, Las Vegas had four master-planned communities ranked in the top 50 of the nation in 2025, including another top 10 showing for Summerlin. That level of concentration in a single metro area is unusual nationally and points to something real about the region’s continued demand for planned communities with full amenities. Las Vegas by percentage represented roughly ten percent of the top 50 list in 2024, and as one analyst put it, the city is “cementing itself as one of the heavy hitters in master-planned community development.”

Master plans are expected to continue outperforming the broader market in 2026, given their lifestyle appeal, amenities, and broader mix of housing products, including more attainably priced detached homes on smaller lots. That performance edge isn’t accidental. It’s the direct result of developers building communities with enough amenities and identity that buyers feel they’re purchasing into something more than just a house.

The Land Constraint: Why the Race Matters

The Land Constraint: Why the Race Matters (Image Credits: Unsplash)
The Land Constraint: Why the Race Matters (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Opening up land for both residential and commercial construction is critical for Southern Nevada as the region is running out of room for development, with much of the surrounding land owned by the Bureau of Land Management. That constraint is precisely why projects like Skye Summit and the Tule Springs East transfer are attracting serious developer attention. Large, contiguous parcels suitable for true master planning are genuinely scarce in the valley. With limited available land in the Las Vegas Valley, new development in places like Summerlin West presents one of the final opportunities to purchase new homes before land scarcity drives prices higher.

With an estimated 30,000 to 50,000 new residents moving to the Las Vegas Valley in 2025 alone, the pressure on available housing inventory is substantial. Active inventory in Henderson stood at approximately 1,850 listings in Q1 2026, down roughly 12 percent compared to Q1 2025, with tightening inventory combined with sustained buyer demand from in-migration and job growth creating a moderately competitive market.

What Makes the “Next Summerlin” Actually Possible

What Makes the "Next Summerlin" Actually Possible (Image Credits: Pixabay)
What Makes the “Next Summerlin” Actually Possible (Image Credits: Pixabay)

Summerlin’s template, repeated successfully by Howard Hughes for 35 years, has always rested on three things: scale, sustained developer commitment, and an identity that attracts builders willing to compete for lots. Skye Canyon, a 1,000-acre next-generation master-planned community in northwest Las Vegas, was the first master-planned community to break ground in Las Vegas in nearly a decade when it launched, which illustrates how rarely these conditions truly align. Skye Summit, coming from the same developer, now aims to raise that bar again.

Whether the next great luxury community emerges on the elevated desert of the northwest with Skye Summit, the growing east Henderson corridor anchored by Cadence, or the vast undeveloped canvas of the Tule Springs East project in the north depends on land transfers, infrastructure investment, and interest rate trajectories that no developer fully controls. If interest rates continue to decline and there’s job growth, Las Vegas will be able to “punch above its weight” and unlock new home demand, according to real estate analysts at RCLCO. The pieces are in place. The timing, as always, is the open question.

The valley’s next signature community won’t announce itself loudly. It will simply, one neighborhood at a time, start looking a lot like a place people didn’t want to leave – which is exactly how Summerlin got started.

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