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Invitation to the Dance

When guests enter the newly expanded Wind Creek Casino and Hotel in Wetumpka, Alabama, they’re greeted by an overhead “sky of ribbons” that unfurls throughout the resort’s lower level, leading them on a journey of discovery.

Starting in the hotel lobby, the design treatment by Hnedak Bobo Group echoes the ebb and flow of wind and water along the nearby Coosa River. Designers also drew inspiration from a native ribbon dance to create the concept, which comes to life in a curving, shimmering pattern of lighting elements. Shifting colors illuminate the hanging sheer metallic mesh fabrics and crystal, creating a feeling of vibrant motion.

The sky of ribbons and custom flooring patterns direct guests to the casino, where the ribbons strengthen in mass along the ceiling plane, curving and intertwining around the resort’s showpiece: a dazzling 360-degree aquarium center bar.

It’s intriguing. It’s artful. And it leads guests naturally and intuitively on a tour of the resort’s many attractions.

For more information, visit hbginc.com.

Pacific Splendor

One of the world’s most profitable casinos is also one of the newest, tucked away on a tiny island in the Pacific Ocean.
    
Only 12.5 miles long and less than six miles wide, Saipan is the principal island of the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas, a U.S. territory.
    
The Best Sunshine Live casino, which opened on the island in 2015, is only a temporary facility with just a handful of VIP tables. It doesn’t even have a hotel. But according to reports, the gaming hall already ranks No. 4 in the world for VIP rolling chip revenue, a figure based on turnover of about $2 billion a month.
    
With that level of patronage and success, Hong Kong-listed Best Sunshine International, a subsidiary of Imperial Pacific International, is comfortable investing a total of $3.1 billion in an opulent permanent resort, with Phase I set to open in early 2017, just in time to celebrate the Chinese New Year.
    
The lavish integrated resort on Saipan’s western coast promises an atmosphere of unsurpassed elegance. It will include regal façade treatments reminiscent of the grand palaces of Paris, with crystal dragons standing guard in the grand lobby. The casino, with up to 300 gaming tables and 400 slot machines, will feature towering golden columns and gilded stone panels. Sky-lit gaming balconies will overlook the formal garden seascape.
    
The natural surroundings are just as impressive. Saipan is a true tropical paradise, formed by a rising coral reef with soft white-sand beaches, crystal-blue water and a balmy climate (with air and water temperatures of about 80 degrees Fahrenheit year-round).
    
The island is also less than five hours by air from most major cities on the Chinese mainland, and to make it even easier for inbound visitors, the territory allows 45 days of visa-on-arrival entry for Chinese tourists.
    
To date, most of Best Sunshine’s direct VIP patrons hail from mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau, Korea and Saipan, the company has stated. Imagine what will happen when they can actually check in for the night.

Owner: Imperial Pacific Holdings
Architect: Steelman Partners
Total Area: 140,000 sq. meters (35 acres)
General Contractor: Sundt/Yates JV
Investment: $3.1 billion

Paradise Found

When the 5 million Pechanga Resort & Casino expansion is completed in December 2017, it will bring a veritable Garden of Eden to Southern California’s Temecula Valley.

Lifescapes International—the creator of iconic landscapes at the Bellagio, Wynn and Venetian hotels, among others—was selected to design the resort landscaping and create a sumptuous pool area spanning four full acres.

Flowers, grasses and shrubbery will flourish throughout the property, from a lush rooftop garden to secluded private gardens in a bi-level stand-alone spa. Guests will stroll along meandering pathways edged with greenery and paved with cobblestone accents. The Lifescapes team will emphasize landscape elements native to the valley including live oaks, sycamores and pepper trees.

Ready for a dip? The pool area will include not one, not two, but eight fabulous pools including five hydrotherapy pools, a family-friendly pool with water slides and a lagoon-style pool. The pool area will also feature a swim-up bar, fire pits and cabanas for shade, relaxation and entertaining. It’s a fitting addition to the resort, which has earned AAA’s Four Diamond rating since 2002.

For more information, visit lifescapesintl.com.

 

Wynn’s Wonder

When Steve Wynn conceived of a new property in Macau’s Cotai region more than six years ago, later dubbed Wynn Palace, the SAR was running strong with no signs of a pullback. VIPs were arriving en masse and Wynn had a corner on many of the good ones at his existing properties, Wynn Macau and Encore Macau. The growth of the mass market was encouraging but not crucial in the face of the healthy VIP segment.
    
And then it all changed. A Chinese economic downturn followed by a crackdown on corruption made a visit to Macau risky, leading to two years of decreasing revenues. Suddenly, a $4 billion investment seemed risky too. But the design was set in stone. And this year’s opening of Wynn Palace was probably the most glittering seen in Macau in several years, unlikely to be rivaled in the near future.
    
Dedicated to art with a floral design, Wynn Palace has the signature of a Wynn development:
    
Performance lake and fountain show. Eight acres of water with almost 1,200 jets send more than 8 million gallons of water into the air. With more than a dozen intricately choreographed musical shows, the fountains dance to a diverse program of Chinese, European and American songs, operatic arias and musical numbers. Guests can view the shows and enter the heart of the resort via dramatic “Sky Cabs” that travel more than 90 feet above the lake.
    
Floral sculptures. Guests are welcomed at two major entrances to the resort with two massive floral sculptures, one of a carousel, the other of a Ferris wheel. Each is fabricated from 100,000 real flowers and moves in time to music. The sculptures are custom-made by renowned flower designer Preston Bailey.

Art, art, art. An investment of more that $125 million has brought thousands of pieces of art for view by visitors to Wynn Palace. Of particular interest is Wynn’s effort to bring Chinese artwork home, including four rare Qing Dynasty vases that are among the finest examples of chinoiserie in the world. The only other such quartet is at Buckingham Palace in London.
    
Amazing amenities. Wynn’s lead designer, Roger Thomas, outdid himself with the Wing Lei Palace, a spectacular example of restaurant design overlooking the performance lake. More than 1,700 rooms, suites and villas echo Wynn’s focus on luxury. And the spa, Macau’s largest, features 22 treatment rooms alongside the pool and poolside restaurant nestled next to the lake.
    
Shopping. Like all integrated resorts in Macau, Wynn has shopping—1,850 square meters of shopping. Unlike any other mall, the Wynn Palace Esplanade features 50 of the most renowned names in retail.
    
But Wynn says the luxury he designs into his resorts only works when you have the best service to complement the amenities.
    
“To be the prettiest hotel in the world frankly is something that money and good taste can buy,” Wynn says. “But to be the best hotel is something else altogether. In any hospitality business there are only two words that matter—guest experience. All the rest is irrelevant. All the marble and the crystal chandeliers, all the wonderful good taste that has been put into this building is dedicated to that one thing.
    
“It took six-and-a-half years to design this magnificent building, and yes, the name on the sign is Wynn Palace. But tonight this becomes the palace of the people who work here, and it is they who will make this the best hotel in the world.”

VIP Seating

Smart casino operators know every customer is a VIP whose comfort comes first. That starts with seating. For more than 20 years, Patir Casino Seating has created premier seating for the casino and hospitality industries.

“Player seating is subject to constant wear and tear,” says Natalie Heldt, sales director for the firm’s Las Vegas branch. “It must be manufactured according to the highest quality standards with fabrics that are exceptionally robust. Comfort has a direct influence on the length of stay at the machine.”

Patir seating is known for its beauty, function and flexibility. Consider the recent Noblesse Collection, with quality finishes and accessories including:

  • Stylish metal hand-pulls for easy movement
  • Elegant quilted patterns on backrest covers
  • High-gloss mahogany finish on the collection’s wooden chairs
  • An innovative new material, Depar, with improved flexing endurance, tear strength and color fastness

Patir can customize seating from existing bases and upper seating components, or create exclusive seating just for your property.

Patir casino seating makes the difference—on the floor and in the bottom line.

For more information, visit patirseating.com.

We’re No. 1

There’s something about being first. People remember Neil Armstrong as the first man on the moon. Few remember who was second. People know Richie Havens opened up Woodstock. Does anybody know who followed Havens?
    
Neither do we.
    
Plainridge Park Casino opened in June 2015 as the first casino in Massachusetts. Working with Penn National Gaming, Turner Construction Company and JCJ Architecture designed and built the $250 million complex ahead of other proposed gaming developments.
    

The expanded racetrack features 44,000 square feet of gaming space with 1,500 slot machines and electronic tables along with live and simulcast horse racing.
    
But Plainridge is more than a place to make a bet. It has live music, upscale casual dining, and the first-ever Doug Flutie Sports Bar, named after the former Boston College and Patriots quarterback. A 1,100-space parking garage completes the complex.
    
First built in the late ’90s, Plainridge began as an undistinguished two-story steel and metal structure. It was important to seamlessly integrate racing with the casino, says architect James T. Murphy, project manager and director of risk management for JCJ Architecture.
    
“To that end, there’s a single entrance for all patrons. And the existing building is no longer all racing. The first-level track-side has upgraded finishes for track customers. The second-level trackside is now a banquet/multi-use facility that can accommodate up to 500 people.”
    
JCJ upgraded the second-level Simulcast Theater to accommodate family dining, while converting the first-level simulcast into Slacks Oyster House and Grill.
    
Because the original building was nondescript, JCJ created a unified identity and appearance. “It got a facelift,” says Murphy. “By applying finishes, colors and textures of the new onto the existing building, there’s a visual relationship between the two. The exterior expresses a clean and contemporary geometry, inspired by the site’s previous use as a rock quarry. By using stone to highlight each stair tower and by providing a sleek horizontal façade, the exterior has a distinctive, modern expression.”
    
The design incorporates sustainable features including a broad array of solar panels which contributed to an LEED Gold certification. Storm water discharge is accommodated on-site and does not run off the property. In addition, Plainridge contains over 20 charging stations for electric vehicles.
   
The casino also references Flutie’s hometown-hero status with a display of memorabilia. “To honor a very local and specific point of pride brings a special regional touch to the facility, creating a strong connection for first-timers or repeat guests,” Murphy says.

Owner: Penn National Gaming
Architect: JCJ Architecture
Builder: Turner Construction Company 
Investment: $250 million

Furnished to Perfection

Four stars. Five diamonds. Two thumbs up.

When it comes to hotel accommodations, the ratings that matter most are those you get from your guests. That means rooms and suites that aren’t just stylish and comfortable but exceptional, with furniture, fixtures and equipment that meet your high standards—and theirs.

Purchasing Management International is the industry’s premier FF&E and OS&E purchasing company. With extensive experience in large luxury projects, PMI works with designers, architects and owners to offer the accuracy, integrity and buying power needed for demanding resort projects.

The company has purchased and installed more than $2 billion in furnishings, operating equipment and systems at Bellagio, Tropicana, Caesars Palace, MGM Grand, Harrah’s, Treasure Island, Mirage, Hard Rock and Station Casinos’ Red Rock Resort. Beyond Vegas, PMI has worked on casinos from east to west including Borgata, Harrah’s Cherokee, Wind Creek Casino, Wild Horse Pass Casino and Sandia Casino.

PMI offers a seasoned staff, deep vendor knowledge and checks and balances like a separate expediting department that controls custom approvals, deliveries and final delivery costs.

For the operator, that means projects that are completed on budget, on time, every time. For guests, that means opening the door to an extraordinary experience.

For more information, visit pmiconnect.com.

Towering Achievement

The most luxurious accommodations at the new Crown Towers Perth will set you back a bit.
    
“You’re looking at about $20,000 to stay at the top villa,” Crown Ltd. CEO Barry Felstead says of the lavish six-star hotel tower, on track for a December opening.
    
Crown Towers aspires to be not just the finest hotel in Perth, but the tallest in the city and the most opulent in Australia. The $568 million, 25-story structure will add 500 new rooms to the complex, for a total of 1,200.
    
Amenities will include a new VIP gaming hall, a full-service spa, a business center and convention complex, and abundant retail and dining options. The latter will include internationally renowned brands such as Nobu, Silks, Bistro Guillaume, Rockpool and Epicurean.
    
YWS Design, which is the lead building designer of Crown Towers Perth, is leading more than 20 design and consulting firms in delivering this world class integrated resort. The look is truly luxe. The tower’s architectural aesthetic is one of contemporary elegance. It all starts at the dramatic podium. Arriving guests are greeted by a series of seven-meter-high glass wall panels and stone columns. The distinctive aesthetic continues in the lobby, where an atrium, skylights and expanses of glass bring in abundant light and picturesque views.
    
A multi-tiered pool area will be a relaxing retreat for guests, who can enjoy luxury cabanas and a cocktail bar surrounding a circular infinity pool. Large outdoor patios and cantilevered roofs will offer shade and protection.
    
With event spaces such as the Great Lawn and the palatial Crown Ballroom, Crown Towers Perth “will surpass even the most seasoned traveler’s expectations,” according to a statement from Crown.
    
Felstead goes a step further, saying the hotel tower overlooking the Swan River will be “the best hotel in Australia, there is no doubt.
    
“It will be absolutely magnificent.”

Owner-Operator: Crown Ltd.
Designer: YWS Design
Builder: Brookfield Multiplex
Materials: 2,500 tons of steel
Investment: $568 million

Where Business Meets Intelligence

In the age of Big Data, casinos capture more customer information than ever before: a landslide of intelligence on guest behaviors, preferences, spend, receptiveness to special offers, etc.

But data without analysis is nothing but noise. In a competitive industry, gathering customer data is just the first step in a business strategy that defends a property’s market position, builds customer loyalty and beats the competition.

The Atlanta-based Rainmaker Group mines those mountains of data, sifts out value and develops plans of action that produce meaningful, measurable results. Among its proven proprietary solutions:

  • guestrev, to forecast room demand and set rates based on total customer value
  • grouprev, to optimize rates for group business  
  • revcaster, to maximize ADR and drive profitability
  • revintel, a web-based platform that gathers all the information that matters to revenue management and places it at your fingertips

Rainmaker distills complex datasets from multiple sources and turns them into highly prescriptive recommendations and actionable insights.

So put Rainmaker on the case. And put your data to work.

For more information, visit letitrain.com.

Refined Rustic

Last summer, the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma broke ground on a comprehensive expansion and renovation of its Choctaw Grant Casino Resort in the community of Grant. On August 18, tribal leaders and state and local officials turned the first shovels for the project, to be designed and built by the Hnedak Bobo Group (HBG).
   
The project will improve the resort’s existing operation and alleviate traffic while adding exciting new amenities.
   
The expansion includes:

  • A new 96-room hotel tower featuring 23 luxury suites;
  • A new lobby and check-in that will create an enhanced arrival experience for hotel guests, with a sundry, valet, bellhop and business center;
  • An expanded swimming pool and outdoor bar nestled in a tropical garden;
  • An exclusive new poker room and 125 new slot machines; and,
  • Food and beverage options including a new 155-seat bar and grill; an expansion of the popular Firehouse Buffet; and a  convenient new grab-and-go coffee shop.

HBG designers coined the term “refined rustic” to describe the design approach. At once contemporary, edgy and pastoral, the concept builds on the Choctaw brand’s warm color palette as well as the existing property’s transitional styling, natural textures and materials and wood accents.
   
The designers also drew inspiration from the Oklahoma landscape: grain stalks blowing in the fields, the vast open sky, and a natural palette of deeply contrasting colors. The team was especially taken with the shape and texture of the area’s weather-worn grain silos.
    
The aged structures have a timeless, iconic aesthetic that combines wood and metal in a multitude of patterns, textures and patinas. This raw materiality within a distinctive contemporary form creates visual interest and consistency among new and existing building elements.
    
“Choctaw red” color accents throughout the resort will further reinforce the brand.
    
The resort will remain open throughout construction, which is expected to be complete in June 2017.

Owner-Operator: Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma
Architect/Interior Designer: Hnedak Bobo Group (HBG)
Employment: Estimated 80 new jobs
Investment: $50 million

The Suite Life

When SOSH Architects designed the new hotel tower at the Scarlet Pearl Casino Resort in D’Iberville, Mississippi, they ensured that each guest room had unobstructed views of the Gulf Coast.

Light and air stream in through floor-to-ceiling glazing. Ceiling heights top out at nine feet to maximize the views and fill the rooms with natural light, but blackout drapes ensure a restful night’s sleep.

Lavish guestroom amenities include natural millwork, polished onyx countertops and California king-sized beds with exquisite leather headboards. Deluxe suites feature a living room and dining area that seats four.

The spa-like baths feature Italian porcelain tile, walk-in showers with recessed LED cove lighting, wall-to-wall vanities in a driftwood tint, and veneer silver travertine countertops. Suites include drop-in bubble tubs with Italian mosaic relief porcelain tile and luxurious gold tub decks.

The suite level includes a Concierge Lounge, where guests can enjoy those panoramic views under a “star-lit sky” ceiling feature.

Just say, “Ahhh…”

For more information, visit sosharch.com.

Making a Spectacle

Usually, an escalator ride is a way to get from Point A to Point B. But not at Resorts World Sentosa, Genting’s 121-acre resort in Singapore, which opened in 2010.
   
There, the Hall of Treasures transforms what is often a mundane trip into a magical mystery tour. As guests go from level to level, they’re surrounded by mirrored cladding that creates an infinity effect. Visual motifs created by LED ribbons stream dynamic images of water, fire, earth and air.
   
It’s just one of several multimedia, multi-sensory, mind-boggling guest experiences created for the resort by L.A.-based Entertainment Design Corp. The award-winning firm is known for eye-popping attractions and live productions including the spectacular stage show for Cher’s three-year residency at Caesars Palace, Barbra Streisand’s 2016 North American tour, the opening ceremonies for the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, and the giant Viva Vision screen at the Fremont Street Experience in Downtown Las Vegas.
   
EDC also produced Resorts World’s Lake of Dreams, which transformed a pedestrian plaza into a dynamic entertainment destination. While beautiful by day, the lake explodes with color and imagery after dark. Light, fire and laser effects tell a story of good fortune as giant vines are transformed into fire-breathing dragons.
   
Perhaps the biggest crowd-pleaser is the Crane Dance display. This modern re-telling of an Asian folk tale tells the story of two mechanical cranes whose love for each other turns them into real birds. Created by Emmy-winning designer Jeremy Railton, the show stars a pair of 10-story, 80-ton mechanical cranes. Despite their size, they move with balletic grace in a touching courtship ritual accompanied by groundbreaking audio and visual technologies. The 10-minute nightly show is the largest dancing animatronics performance in the world, and the cranes are powered by 5,000 HP diesel engines, the kind used by railroads.
   
Using a cohesive narrative, EDC’s “360-degree entertainment” approach extends the resort brand in multiple areas and elevates the guests’ overall experience, paving the way for repeat visits and loyalty to the location. The firm’s designers, directors, illustrators, producers and technical experts are capable of taking each project from start to finish—from concept through production and finally, to applause.

Owner: Genting Singapore PLC
Entertainment Overlay: Entertainment Design Corp.

Lobbying for Change

Talk about sophisticated marketing.    

When the Solaire Resort & Casino opened in Manila in 2013, Bloomberry Resorts Corp. and Steelman Partners took an innovative approach to the lavish $1 billion-plus resort, the first of four to be developed in the capital’s Entertainment City.
   
A distinctive “stratified” design featured lobbies and entryways for each of four guest segments, with games, restaurants and bars tailored to each customer category. The approach was and is unique to Solaire.
   
“Today, we design casinos into distinctive segments,” explains architect and Steelman Partners CEO Paul Steelman. “In the near future, the casino will be designed in segments that allow a millennial to have a unique experience too. That experience will not be able to cohabitate with a 60-year-old slot player.”
   
As for results, the numbers don’t lie. In July, Entertainment City resorts recorded overall gross gaming revenue of PHP7.2 billion (US$155 million), up 25 percent year-on-year for the sector’s third best month ever.
   
“Casinos are changing drastically in almost every way, from planning to design to operations to marketing,” notes Steelman. “It’s a whole new world.”

For more information, visit steelmanpartners.com.

Staying Ahead

Less than a year after it completed a 0 million renovation of the property that included new signage and Boardwalk access, the Atlantic City Tropicana wrapped up another million upgrade.
   
Designed by SOSH Architects, the Trop renovations continue the reinvestment in the property that has been ongoing since Carl Icahn purchased it in 2010. The Tropicana today is one of Atlantic City’s most successful casinos, and includes the most non-gaming amenities of any casino in the city.
   
This round of renovations included a complete renovation of the 500 rooms in the Havana Tower, matching the renovations completed a year earlier in the North Tower. The rooms feature sophisticated new décor, contemporary artwork, modern furnishings and spa-inspired bathrooms. Natural light floods all the rooms through large windows with various ocean and bay views. Cues were taken from woven textiles in neutral hues, lively accent colors, and bold patterns inspired by the Cuban marketplace, which is also celebrated at Tropicana’s The Quarter shopping area.
   
In a nod to the casino’s most important customers, the Tropicana added a new High-Limit Slot Room, with 175 high-denomination video slot games. At the entrance, more than 2,000 illuminated falling flower crystals give the illusion of petals floating softly through the air. Private luxury restrooms, leather-wrapped walls, walnut woodwork, marble floors and both smoking and non-smoking areas complete the well-designed space.   

And finally, in an effort to improve operations and customer service, the Trop opened up a back-of-the-house area to provide a Pacific Avenue entrance to the property, something previously lacking. The project consists of three amenities—a newly redesigned Rewards Center, the Corner Market, and the high-end Luxe Salon. The repurposed space boasts a sleek modern look and feel, with marble flooring, dimensional metal columns, and neutral walls with saturated color accents to add to the contemporary design. The use of luminous LED spheres in various sizes and patterns emanates spectacular light throughout the concourse.
   
The end result is a dynamic new space and amenities for guests to enjoy at the Atlantic City resort.

Owner: Tropicana Entertainment
Architect/Interior Designer: SOSH Architects
General Contractor: Massett Building Company
Investment: $50 million

Fast, Fresh & 24/7

Casino resorts are known for unlimited dining choices, from high-end restaurants to all-you-can-eat buffets. But when your guests crave a fast, filling meal on the go, Subway is a natural choice.
        
Customers love the hearty, healthy food and speedy service. Casinos value the internationally known brand, strong corporate support and Subway’s ability to turn even small spaces into profit centers.  
   
Perhaps most importantly, the restaurants are open 24 hours, says franchise owner Donna Curry, who operates locations in 22 Las Vegas casinos. “When other restaurants and nightclubs close, we serve guests who want a bite to eat in the wee hours,” Curry says. “Guests who want to grab a sandwich and get back to the gaming table choose Subway.”
   
Subway restaurants succeed because they fill a need—quickly and deliciously. Their sandwiches are made to order with fresh produce, lean meats and cheeses and other healthy ingredients on fresh-baked bread. In 2012, the American Heart Association chose Subway as the first restaurant chain to display its Heart-Check Meal Certification logo on selected meals.
   
As the undisputed leader in fast, healthy food, Subway is a winning bet for casinos.
  
For more information, visit subway.com.

Going Social

The Morongo Casino Resort and Spa outside Palm Springs, California, has a unique solution to attracting the millennials so sought-after in today’s casino world. The theme for the casino’s new MEBar is “Sit down, log in, drink up and start trending.”
   
With a variety of unique cocktails and award-winning craft beers from the Dudes’ Brewing Company in Torrance, the MEBar is an unusual interactive environment where guests can share selfies and musings on the high-definition, social media-linked monitors that pack the new lounge.   
   
“The MEBar will redefine the term ‘hot spot’ by allowing our guests to share the fun of a night out at Morongo with the rest of the bar and across the cyber-universe,” says Simon Farmer, Morongo’s executive director of marketing. “Our goal is to integrate social media into the lounge environment to create a distinctive experience that our guests won’t find elsewhere.”
   
MEBar monitors are linked to Twitter. Everyone tagging a tweet with #MEBar or #Morongo can see their posts appear around the bar and across the internet in near-real time.
   
Built alongside the High Limit Gaming Room, the sleek new MEBar features iconic fire-red stone walls, 15 LED TVs, a custom mural framing the outside, and a menu of camera-ready concoctions, perfect for snapping and sharing.

The MEBar is open 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. seven days a week.

Owner-Operator: Morongo Band of Mission Indians
Architect/Designer: Bergman, Walls & Associates, Las Vegas

Cheers!

Your casino’s sensational. Your hotel rooms are out of this world. But for positive buzz, repeat business and diehard customer loyalty, you’d better have a great bar.

When the San Manuel Indians undertook a $50 million renovation of their San Manuel Indian Bingo & Casino near San Bernardino, California, the bar underwent a total makeover, expanding occupancy, gaming and entertainment and transforming it into a dramatic centerpiece visible throughout the casino floor.

With 20 table-top video poker terminals, three blackjack tables and seating for 70, the memorably named Bar Bar Bar designed by Thalden Boyd Emery Architects extends and enlivens the casino floor, giving guests a place to relax, play, sample artisan cocktails and craft beers and observe all the action.

The bar features a dazzling light show in which layered, internally lit leaves create a glowing overhead canopy. Color-shifting special effects can be modified for holidays and other special occasions. Bar Bar Bar gets high marks for its vibrant design, friendly vibe and can’t-miss location.

For more information, visit tbe.com.

Desert Flower

It’s been a landmark of the Santa Cruz Valley since 1994. In 2011 and 2012, Harrah’s Ak-Chin Casino added a million hotel and entertainment center. Three years later, it was ready to grow again.
   
In 2015, the Ak-Chin Indian Community announced it would invest $100 million in a massive expansion of the property, which has been likened to “a great saguaro cactus rising above the desert.”
   
The plan calls for a ballroom-event space, additional restaurants and a 700-space parking garage. The expansion will also add a new hotel with 230 luxury rooms and suites. Featuring panoramic views of the valley, the rooms will have a distinctly tribal flavor, thanks to 75 Ak-Chin elders who consulted on the decor.
   
“They wanted to make sure the facility, from a cultural perspective, reflected something very unique,” says Chandra Reilly, project director for general contractor Sundt/Yates, a joint venture. “While they’re connected to other O’odham communities, they have their own unique culture.”
   
The design scheme will integrate images of water, cacti and the devil’s claw plant. The color palette will evoke the warm, vivid hues of the great Southwestern desert.
   
Of course, every desert needs an oasis. The existing pool area, known for its swim-up bar, will be replaced with a zero-entry beach pool complete with water jets and poolside cabanas. First-floor guest rooms will become pool bungalows, with their own private terraces. Multiple integrated hot tubs will allow guests to select water temperatures and settings at the push of a button.
   
The existing 40,000-square-foot gaming area (including Caesars’ only bingo hall, companywide) will also grow.
    
“This expansion will provide our guests and visitors with the high-quality hospitality and entertainment they have come to expect here at Harrah’s Ak-Chin Casino,” says Ak-Chin Chairman Robert Miguel.
   
Construction began in June. The project is expected to be complete in 2018.

Owner: Ak-Chin Indian Community
Operator: Caesars Entertainment
Architect: Thalden Boyd Emery
General Contractor: Sundt/Yates JV
Investment: $110 million

Timeless, Extraordinary Design

Established in 1987, Steelman Partners has positioned itself as a leader in the industry, boasting some of the most talented and acclaimed architects, designers, planners and artists, all working in-house. This international, Las Vegas-based firm specializes in the multi-disciplinary facets of hospitality and entertainment architecture, interior design and lighting design.
   
Steelman Partners has international office locations in China, Vietnam, Amsterdam and Cambodia, and owns and operates several affiliated design companies: Dalton, Steelman Arias and Associates, shop12 Design, Inviro Studios and MARQI Branding Studio.
     
DSAA is a full-service interior design firm specializing in the creation of engaging interiors for the high-end hospitality, resort and gaming industries. DSAA has created entertainment-based, profitable interiors for thousands of restaurants and lounges, casinos and VIP gaming salons, spas, retail and performance venue projects across the globe.
     
Shop12 Design is a full-service lighting, visual feature and theater design studio specializing in creative collaboration on cutting-edge performance venues, custom visual and interactive environments and all facets of high-end hospitality lighting.
     
Inviro is an international animation studio creating content for the film, television and architectural industries, as well as collaborating on complete ride experiences. Responsible for original-character design, scriptwriting, 3D space visualization and product merchandising, Inviro brings imagined ideas and concepts to the screen.
     
MARQI is an international branding studio focused on identifying the energy and identity behind every project. The studio specializes in creating universal stories that make an experience memorable. Naming, branding, storytelling and visual communication provide the catalyst for innovative concepts, unique services, signature products, themed environments and iconic structures.
     
Steelman Partners believes extraordinary design is timeless. With more than 4,000 completed projects in its 34-year history, the firm’s impressive client list includes Genting Group, the Venetian/Las Vegas Sands, MGM, Harrah’s, Swiss Casinos, Sheraton, Hyatt, Plaza/El-Ad, SDJM, Melco, Caesars Entertainment and many others.
   
Steelman Partners is headed by recognized visionary designer Paul Steelman, a native of Atlantic City, New Jersey. He was honored with the 2010 Sarno Lifetime Achievement Award and received the 2006 HOSPY Lifetime Achievement Award. Steelman has been featured in many publications and visual media, including Forbes magazine “Designing for Dough” and the Oceans 13 DVD (“The Opulent Illusion”).
   
For more information, contact Steelman Partners at 702-873-0221, email info@steelmanpartners.com or visit steelmanpartners.com.

Young Dragons

t was a classic humid June night in downtown Cleveland, but the scene was anything but typical. The clock had struck midnight at about the same time streams of mostly ecstatic Cavs fans began pouring out of “The Q” (Quicken Loans Arena). Native son Lebron James had just put the finishing touches on a brilliant performance that had propelled Cleveland to a 2-games-to-1 lead in the NBA Finals.
  
The many indoor-outdoor bars that surround the arena quickly swelled beyond capacity, while seemingly endless waves of millennials, adorned in Cleveland Cavaliers gear, just kept coming. There was singing and dancing in the streets—much of it influenced by approachable inebriation. For a city beaten down by decades of hard times, the guarded optimism hanging in the air was as blissful as it was distinctly foreign.    

For those not inclined to partake in what had the potential to slip into a display of marked public lunacy, but were also not quite ready to call it a night, there was only one other obvious available option: the Horseshoe Casino, located just across the street from the arena.
    
The Cavs are owned by magnate Dan Gilbert, who made much of his $5 billion fortune via his ownership of Quicken Loans. Gilbert’s entrepreneurial success with that not-so-sexy form of commerce allowed him the opportunity to get into two comparatively flashy entertainment businesses vis-à-vis sports and gambling. In Cleveland, Gilbert’s two flagship businesses are his NBA franchise, the Cavaliers, and the Horseshoe Casino, which is physically connected, by “sky-bridge” walkway, to Quicken Loans Arena.
    
On that unusual night one group of attendees, making their way from the arena to the casino, particularly stuck out. They appeared to be in their early 30s and only a few of them were wearing NBA apparel—of the visiting Golden State Warriors. Amid a backdrop whereby the crowd and the increasingly rowdy atmosphere was markedly Midwest-American-white, the other distinguishing characteristic of the group was even more distinctive: they were ethnically Chinese.
    
The casino floor, like the surrounding streets outside, was jam-packed with a mix of mostly voyeuristic curiosity seekers coming from the arena, casual gamblers and traditional slot players who may have forgotten about the big game that night and were now dealing with the consequences.
    
Perhaps surprisingly to some, the Horseshoe Cleveland has baccarat tables. It will come as a surprise to few that this group of Chinese guests had found them. As they saddled up to positions 1-2-3-5-6, one of the women in the group reached into her purse, pulled out a stack of money and pushed it across the table toward the dealer to exchange for playing chips.
    
In baccarat there is usually no position 4, because that number is homophonous with “death” in Chinese; the nuances of superstition and luck within the mindset of the Asian gambler are seemingly endless.
    
Several octaves below the ambient crowd noise, slot machine clamor and John Mellencamp’s “Hurts So Good,” the young Chinese woman tapped her cash and rather firmly said to the dealer, “li?ng wàn” ($20,000). In short order a casino host, also of Asian descent, appeared and engaged the group in some light Chinese banter. It was just another Tuesday night in Cleveland, Ohio.

The Future is Asian

For some regional casinos, a few observed baccarat tables and a handful of Chinese-speaking staff may currently suffice. But for businesses located within geographic zones containing larger numbers of Asian residents and those situated in destination markets, this type of customer—specifically the Chinese millennial leisure traveler—will soon become increasingly important.
   
Chinese outbound tourists are already the world’s most numerous and most high-volume spenders. In 2014, a record 109 million Chinese outbound tourists spent $164 billion. By 2019, these numbers are expected to balloon to 174 million people spending an incredible $264 billion annually on outbound tourism. Nearly all of this growth in foreign travel has come over the past 10 years; in 2000, there were only 10 million Chinese outbound tourists.
   
The driving force behind this new wave of leisure travelers is Chinese millennials—especially those between 25 and 34 years old, who are in many ways different from both their parents and their peer groups in Western nations. This group of Chinese, born between 1980 and 1989, comprise more than 200 million people, or about 17 percent of China’s 1.3 billion total population.
   
With China’s economy being among the largest in the world, the income levels of many of its citizens are now high enough to be able to travel abroad. Unlike their American counterparts still mired by the aftereffects of the Great Recession, Chinese millennials have seen their incomes rise nearly 35 percent over the past three years. In just the past year, the number of Chinese outbound travelers has increased by an astonishing 20 percent. This has not gone unnoticed by hoteliers, with nearly 60 percent of U.S. and 80 percent of AsiaPac destination-market businesses noting discernible increases in visitation by Chinese millennial guests.
   
Fully 90 percent of Chinese millennials surveyed recently by Hotels.com’s Chinese International Travel Monitor stated that “leisure” was their main reason for international travel.
   
Gambling overseas is also a very popular vacation activity for Chinese tourists. In the last five years, the number of Chinese nationals traveling to Las Vegas has jumped by 80 percent, according to the Wall Street Journal. In a recent survey of mainland Chinese millennials, Las Vegas was cited as the most popular outbound destination for a leisure travel experience.
   
Two of the gaming industry’s leading markets, Macau and Las Vegas, are facing a similar challenge, whereby demographic trends in particular are disrupting traditional business models.
   
In the case of Macau—which has seen historic gambling revenue lows this year—there is a shift toward diversification, largely via government mandate, away from a near total reliance on the VIP market and toward a broadening of amenities that have a better chance of appealing to China’s growing middle class, which McKinsey China forecasts will constitute 630 million people by 2022.
   
In Las Vegas, an aging population of slot players is being replaced by younger consumers, including Chinese millennials, who by and large have thus far shown a marked lack of interest in traditional casino games compared to generations past.
   
Shopping is perhaps the most popular activity of Chinese outbound tourists. China’s import and consumption tax rates have resulted in luxury goods often costing several times more in mainland China, compared to the same item sold in Western nations.     
   
In England, Chinese tourists spent nearly $3,000 per person per trip, three times the market average. Much of this expenditure is going toward shopping, which for many Chinese is prioritized above other travel items such as accommodations.
   
Other popular activities among Chinese millennial leisure travelers include visiting important landmarks—though the younger generations are shunning group tours, whereby one might get off a bus to take a quick picture and then immediately get back on to go to the next stop, in favor
of deeper cultural experiences.
   
Chinese millennials are the first generation to be born into the country’s one-child policy. As a result, they have more spending power than prior generations. Though they are putting off marriage a couple of years, on average, later in life than their parents did, Chinese millennials are twice as likely to be married than their U.S. counterparts.
   
A recent survey among Chinese millennials found that 65 percent travel with family and/or their significant others versus traveling with friends. This behavior obviously influences the types of experiences and activities they seek, and may partially explain why nightclubs and other places that encourage “social collisions” are generally of less interest among this group of consumers; this is in direct contrast to what American millennials are typically seeking out in a leisure entertainment environment.
   
As is the case with their U.S. counterparts, younger Chinese consumers rely heavily on mobile technology, social media and peer reviews when making purchase decisions related to their trips abroad. According to a recent Hotels.com survey, nearly half of Chinese millennials rely on word-of-mouth and consumer reviews online, while 80 percent within this demographic used a desktop, laptop or mobile device to plan and book their travel in 2014 (compared to 53 percent the year before). It is not surprising then that, like younger Americans, Chinese millennials rank “free Wi-Fi” as by far their most desirable amenity when traveling.
   
Unlike American millennials, who have transformed places like Las Vegas into a nightclub and dayclub mecca, Chinese younger consumers are generally disinterested in “clubbing” and the traditional, alcohol-fueled bar scene. They also prefer indoor pools to outdoor, perhaps partially because of a desire to stay out of the sun due somewhat to perceived social stigmas pertaining to darker skin tones that are not uncommon in emerging countries.
   
The United States is among the nations most visited by Chinese millennial tourists outside of Asia, along with France and Australia. Within these places, and beyond, this block of consumers is increasingly looking for something special and personalized, which they can share with friends via their social networks. When studying the Chinese millennial, one finds that this notion of prioritizing the individual self is a recurring theme; and it is also one which hints at ways to reach and retain them as customers.
    
With free Wi-Fi as a baseline expectation, forward-thinking leisure industry companies can look to engage Chinese millennials in ways that tap into their desire for something custom-made, such as leveraging the power of dominant social networks like WeChat to communicate with them in interesting and sharable ways.
    
It is vitally important for businesses within hospitality, retail, restaurant and entertainment verticals to understand the behaviors and drivers of the Chinese millennial—a different set of consumers poised to transform these industries for years to come.

Generational Shift

Chinese born in the 1980s—also referred to within China as the “Balinghou” generation—are distinctively different. Since the death of Mao Zedong, rapid change has occurred in China, which has paved the way for new prospects and challenges that are far different from what their parents experienced at the same age. Radical disparities exist between Chinese youth and older generations.
   
Simultaneous with China’s swift economic growth has been a global explosion of new technology, bringing unique methods of communication and amplified exposure to other cultures. Increased prosperity, freedom and exposure to new ideas have also led Chinese millennials to socialize in new ways.
   
WeChat (called “Weixin,” literally translated as “micro-message” in China) is one of China’s most popular social networks. It’s part WhatsApp and part Facebook; since its debut in 2011, WeChat now boasts 450 million users in China. The mobile app’s core users are urban youths, many of whom default to the platform over exchanging phone numbers as a preferred way to keep in touch with their friends.
   
Similar to Twitter in that feeds are created to allow users to receive information as it is pushed out by chosen channels, WeChat is primarily a text and audio service between private users or small, privately invited groups of up to 100 people. Users can extend their reach by posting “moments” which are streams of images, text messages and links available only within their network of contacts in a way that is more streamlined than Facebook’s “wall.”
   
WeChat has made itself a potent tool for marketers looking to tap into tightly knit groups—such as Chinese millennial travelers. Marketing, sales of physical products and/or booking of services are all available on the platform to companies registered in China.
   
As Chinese consumers tend to be even more influenced by their peers than Westerners, the size, scope and functionality of the app presents a potent mix for businesses to contemplate tapping into. WeChat for Business (in China) allows B2C payments in areas for consumables such as plane tickets, hotel reservations and taxi fares. Payments are made by scanning an offline or QR code or via a payment processing platform contained within the app that links to the user’s bank account.
   
WeChat users average more than 40 minutes per day using the app, with more than 55 percent of users indicating they open the app at least 10 times per day. The Chinese-language version of WeChat has many additional features that make it much deeper than just a messaging platform. It also has mobile news, blogging, online storefront, mobile wallet, “people nearby” and even job-hunting uses. University of Pennsylvania researcher Jiaqi Wu makes the argument that the uniqueness of how the app works and who is using it (Chinese millennials) transcend the virtual and enter the physical world of networking, relationships and social interaction.
   
In many Western countries, young people socialize at cafés, bars or clubs. Although these types of venues can also be found throughout China, Chinese millennials normally favor different types of social environments. Perhaps no more universal example exists, in China and throughout Southeast Asia, than karaoke (or “KTV,” short for Karaoke Television), which is a wildly popular leisure activity across generations, including millennials.
   
In a nation such as China, where consumption of alcohol is less prevalent than it is in the West, karaoke provides a livelier alternative to other types of non-alcohol-related activities such as going to the movies. Guests pay hourly rates for private rooms with padded walls and sort through catalogues that often contain thousands of songs to choose from. Venues range from small and cheap to vast and ostentatious. Many have interactive gaming tables and expansive food offerings.
   
Opportunities exist for Western businesses that may currently, or in the near future, seek to attract Chinese millennials by integrating karaoke itself and also—perhaps more importantly— by extracting the compelling and applicable fragments of a karaoke experience into other business units.
   
Just as a Westerner traveling in China, perhaps reluctant to embarrass himself in public and/or feel overwhelmed by the vast cultural differences, the Ch
inese millennial may change his tune (pun intended) and start belting out verses when a Bon Jovi song is played. So too does the opportunity exist for Western businesses to spark a sense of nostalgia-for-home by incorporating singers such as Andy Lau into the mix, be it within a karaoke environment or beyond.
   
Tea Houses have traditionally been another very popular social activity in China, and are often associated with relaxation, entertainment, interaction and a forum for sharing thoughts with friends and colleagues.
   
In recent years, Chinese millennials have shown a particular affinity for coffee consumption. Cafés such as Starbucks and Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf (“Xiangbinfei” in China) have become popular places for young people, influenced by Western culture, to hang out. The architecture in these cafés often combines historic and modern styles in ways that appeal to a demographic with one foot in each era.
   
For businesses attempting to court Chinese millennials, there may be opportunities to convert physical environments that are static at certain times, such as a bar or lounge in the early afternoon, into transformable modules that can be converted for different types of consumers throughout the day.
  
Wildly popular among Chinese millennials, hot pot chain Hai Di Lao competes in a very difficult space. The company describes its physical environment as an ideal place for social gatherings—for customers with some extra time to spare.
   
A “hot pot” style of eating basically involves dipping a seemingly endless variety of meats and vegetables in simmering broth. The cooking concept is simple and easy for competitors to replicate. Hai Di Lao has become one of China’s most successful “hot pot” brands largely by focusing on experiential components of the dining (and pre-dining) environment. The restaurant chain has a strong reputation for customer and employee loyalty, which are both atypical for Chinese hospitality businesses.
   
The experiential element of Hai Di Lao undoubtedly plays an important role in the chain’s success. Customer satisfaction is actually increased while patrons are waiting (sometimes hours) for their tables because the restaurant has so many entertainment and leisure options available. This type of creative queuing system opens many possibilities for other types of leisure and hospitality businesses to tap into the unique phases of a particular experience, beginning with the wait for the experience to begin.
   
American millennial views on the correlation between money and happiness overwhelmingly lean toward spending money on experiences over things. Chinese millennials seem to want both.

Chinese Millennial Mindset

Over the course of the next several years, Chinese millennials will be the demographic force behind revenue growth for businesses in leisure verticals.
   
The demands of this consumer set are complex and steeped in juxtaposition with their parents, thousands of years of history and the outside world they are so eager to explore. For global corporations doing business in China, there is added opportunity (and risk) in attempting to woo Chinese millennials.
   
Attracting Chinese millennials to a physical product, or a physical space, requires an acknowledgement that what has worked in the past will likely not work with them.
   
It would be a significant miscalculation, for example, to assume they will respond to what (and how) their parents consume. Chinese millennials definitely want material things. But they also want to express themselves in ways they are comfortable with, which appeal to their desire to really know who they are hanging out with in their quest for deep and meaningful relationships with other people.
   
Investment in a consumer insights study geared toward the specific goals of a development project that seeks to attract Chinese millennials would be a worthwhile investment for any business looking to tap into this enormous potential revenue stream.
   
For leisure and interconnected businesses, this means developing beyond a small, singular localized element within a designated environment. The larger experience—driven by a desire for something different, unique and genuine—should also be contemplated in ways that reflect end even encourage the blurring of cultural lines to that place where discovery of something “new” is likely always the experience for someone in the room.