Irwin Molasky, a longtime Las Vegas developer and philanthropist, died Saturday, July 4, at age 93. Molasky founded the Nathan Adelson Hospice in 1978, among other real estate accomplishments. Molasky's death was announced Sunday by the hospice. For more than 50 years, Irwin Molasky has played a significant role in the phenomenal growth of the Las Vegas valley. As Chairman of The Molasky Group of Companies, he has been an innovator in the creation of much of the Las Vegas skyline. He and business partner Merv Adelson were responsible for the city’s first private hospital, the 688-bed Sunrise Hospital Surgical Center & Medical Center, which now has 28 operating rooms and a nationally renowned neo-natal unit; Paradise Palms, the area’s first master-planned community, which captured national honors; seven golf courses and their communities; thousands of apartment communities; the first high-rise office building in downtown Las Vegas, Bank of America Plaza; and designed and developed the state’s first and largest enclosed shopping mall, the 1,350,000-square-foot Boulevard Mall. He ignited the luxury high-rise condominium market with Park Towers at Hughes Center, which Town and Country named “one of the five best buildings in the United States.” Most recently, Molasky set the tone for sustainable development with Las Vegas’ first and largest LEED certified Gold building, the 17-story Molasky Corporate Center, home to the Southern Nevada Water Authority. Molasky has made a number of influential contributions to Nevada, including building the state’s first hospice, The Nathan Adelson Hospice, that serves the terminally ill and their families, regardless of their ability to pay. He and Merv Adelson were key figures in the development of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas through a donation of 45 prime acres of land at Flamingo Road and Maryland Parkway. Molasky also helped to locate McCarran International Airport at its current site and assisted with the land purchase for the Las Vegas Convention Center. In 1981 Molasky formed and became Founding Chairman of the UNLV Foundation, which to date has raised more than $700 million to provide support for students and faculty. He serves on the Board of the Future for the National Judicial College in Reno. Molasky was a founder and served as an Officer of the Board of Directors of Lorimar Entertainment, a conglomerate of television, broadcasting and print media. Molasky is survived by his wife, Susan, and four children.