SOSH Architects was founded in 1979 on the core conviction that quality design continually rewards the community, the client and the design team. The firm has steadily grown from a company of four partners to its current size of approximately 50 design professionals and support staff engaged in the execution of major master planning, architecture and interior design commissions worldwide.
The company philosophy drives a design process that values exploration, visualization and the contributions of multiple voices consistent with the belief that the best design solutions are the result of thoughtful collaboration.
SOSH’s principals—Thomas J. Sykes, William A. Salerno and Nory Hazaveh—continue the commitment of personal involvement in each project. With offices in Atlantic City and New York, SOSH Architects has established a worldwide reputation for master planning, architectural design, interior design and strong project delivery achievement.
For more than three decades, SOSH Architects has had the opportunity to work on an impressive array of hospitality design projects. From master planning to restaurant renovation, from new tower construction to resort expansions, SOSH has handled every aspect of hotel and casino design on multiple properties in the major urban markets of New York, Philadelphia and Atlantic City, as well as in California, Arizona, Nevada, Mississippi, Indiana, Louisiana, Connecticut, the Caribbean, Europe and Asia.
Gaming floors, hotel rooms, restaurants, nightclub and entertainment venues, ballrooms, retail stores, lounges, pool and spa retreats, administrative support space, food service facilities and day care centers all can be found on the same property, and each use brings with it a unique set of challenges and technical requirements.
Ongoing or recently completed projects include: Hard Rock Rocksino Northfield Park in Northfield, Ohio; Scarlet Pearl Casino Resort in D’Iberville, Mississippi; Seneca Resort and Casino in Niagara, New York; Parx Casino in Bensalem, Pennsylvania; Resorts World Bimini in the Bahamas; the Lobby Bar at Harrah’s Resort, Royal Swan Ballroom at Tropicana Casino and Resort, the Palace Court Buffet at Caesars, and the Borgata Baking Company at Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa in Atlantic City, New Jersey.
For more information, contact SOSH Architects in Atlantic City at 609-345-5222, or in New York at 212-246-2770; email sosh@sosharch.com or visit sosharch.com.
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Extraordinary Design is Timeless
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 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. Five global offices join forces to design master plans, casinos, integrated resorts and theme parks throughout the world, with more than 4,000 completed projects in its 33-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, plus 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.
All Hospitality All The Time
During the past 40 years, the Native American-owned firm of Thalden Boyd Emery Architects has become one the best-known casino-hotel architects in America. Empowered with the motto “All Hospitality All The Time,” TBEA has a depth of experience like no other Native American-owned architecture firm. Its passion in architecture and design has led to working with more than 102 tribes and First Nations, building more than 200 casino projects and more than 400 hotels.
TBEA’s portfolio includes working with some of the most recognized companies. Past clients have included Harrah’s, Hilton, Holiday Inns Worldwide, Hyatt, Marriott, Radisson, Donald Trump and Delaware North Companies Inc.
Hotel & Motel Management magazine ranks TBEA a “Top Design” firm in the hospitality industry in the United States. It is a company with extensive experience designing destination resorts, gaming floors, atriums, hotel rooms, entertainment venues, convention space, multi-use space, retail, restaurants and parking garages for tribes in the United States and Canada.
The company, with its highly experienced staff of professionals, consolidates offices in Las Vegas, St. Louis, Tulsa and Phoenix. It combines the Native American background and design expertise of Chief Boyd, chief executive officer and principal, with the creative hotel and casino design expertise of Rich Emery, president and principal, plus the production talents of Nick Schoenfeldt, vice president and principal.
Since 1971, TBEA has been architect for resorts, hotels and casinos and for the hospitality and gaming industries. The firm’s approach of creating “ordinary to extraordinary” is based on developing unique and exciting visions and bringing them to life.
TBEA took the leading edge of the wave of mega-resorts in Las Vegas, designing technical theming drawings for resorts like the Venetian Casino, Hotel & Resort. The firm has built a reputation for delivering projects on time and on budget.
TBEA provides full architectural services including master planning, engineering and interior design.
Thalden Boyd Emery Architects is an active associate member of the American Institute of Architects and an associate member of the National Indian Gaming Association.
To learn more, visit thaldenboydemery.com or contact Linda J. Roe, vice president, business development or Kevin Chapman, manager, commercial business development, at 314-727-7000.
Tough Decisions
It has become commonly recognized by developers and restaurateurs that customers are seeking more than just great food when they sit down for a meal in a nice restaurant. They want an experience. What this exactly means is a question that has only recently become the subject of study by thought leaders within the hospitality industry.
As we examine the key components of a dining experience, design emerges again and again as a critically important piece of the puzzle. Executives refer to the importance of design within the context of congruency, the bridge between the story they want to tell and the brand identity they want to reinforce. Managers refer to design’s impact on staff efficiency and their ability to turn more tables each night. Customers, particularly within an integrated resort, will often shop the look of a restaurant before thinking about viewing a menu.
Increasingly, design is becoming credited as one of the most important, and least studied, attributes in why consumers choose one restaurant over another. From an increasingly visual universe of online and social media reviews, where consumers share commentary and imagery, a restaurant’s design is moving from background to foreground in its influence within the overall experiential palate.
Academic researchers are recognizing the importance of design, particularly in creating desired ambiances within fine dining restaurants. More and more, it is becoming accepted that physical environments create emotional responses in individuals, which in turn elicit a desire to further explore or completely avoid. This concept is further elaborated upon via the postulation of “servicescapes” that emphasize the critical importance of providing attractive environments for inducing customer satisfaction and loyalty over time.
Accordingly, a positive response to a “servicescape” is expected to result in positive beliefs and feelings toward the establishment, its people and its offerings.
Media covering the industry is also taking notice, as evidenced when Elite Traveler revealed its World’s Top 100 Restaurants of 2014. The list’s 16 new entrants, voted on by readers of the luxury lifestyle publication, lauded the association with a famous architect and designer as much as a posh location, exotic cuisine or celebrity chef affiliation.
Consumers feel more empowered than ever to evaluate what in the past may have been viewed as the unsung ingredients of a dining experience. Emboldened by a sense of expertise that popular television shows such as Chopped, Beat Bobby Flay and Restaurant Startup have given them, the general public has a raised antenna to every aspect of the restaurant experience today. Their expectations are high. And they’re not afraid to let the world know—through Yelp, Instagram and Twitter—when they have been disappointed.
Because of this, we must study consumers like never before and put our learnings to work at the onset of our development process.
Why Study Guest Psyche?
In the hospitality industry, deep thought about the psychological and emotional drivers of choice on consumer decision-making is quite rare. Hoteliers and restaurateurs have historically developed properties as much for their own egos as they have for a perceived, or hoped-for, demand.
With consumer spending in restaurants up dramatically and consistently over the past four decades, competition has also greatly increased. That reality has placed incredible pressure on developers to conceive new concepts, quickly, which will both differentiate and resonate with a fickle public. From the heights of economic prosperity to the depths of financial depression, the hospitality industry—as a whole—has been slow to embrace a researched approach to development.
In global destination markets like Las Vegas, a “build it and they will come” approach dominated the first two thirds of the town’s “cowboy-to-gangster-to-MBA” progression.
Perhaps another rationale for steering clear of a science-based path toward understanding behavior has to do with a longstanding misconception of what “research” is and how it should be applied toward understanding customer psyches. Justification for this internal bias may be that “market research” is viewed as a sign of executive weakness or that there is a fear of delaying tight schedules or derailing projects entirely if consumers don’t respond “the way we want” to our ideas, sketches and animations.
Steve Jobs: Research Foe?
Many executives around the world would nod their heads in agreement if they happened to come across the Steve Jobs quote, “Customers don’t know what they want until we’ve shown them,” or a quote Jobs apparently liked from Henry Ford, “If I’d asked customers what they wanted, they would have told me, ‘a faster horse!’”
Jobs is absolutely correct in his statement, as is Ford; but neither makes a convincing case for not conducting market research. Rather, both highlight the misperception many have as to what consumer research is—namely, asking people directly what they want.
To actually understand what consumers want is an egoless exercise in immersion, venturing as deep as possible into what it’s like to be them—at home, at work and at play.
This approach, done correctly, yields valuable insights that misguided methodologies would have missed or, at best, misconstrued. These insights, in turn, spark actionable ideas—in the minds of artists and executives—that are rooted in something viable.
Within this capacity, Jobs was an exceptional “researcher” of human behavior. In this context, his brilliance was that he understood, before the opportunity developed, that everyday people wanted to use computers, yet the frustration in their complexity was an overwhelming barrier for the non-technically inclined. His focus on a “lite” version of a computer, that was simple and stylish, was a direct result of insights gleaned from observing consumer experiences with what was in the marketplace.
No one could have told Jobs to make an iPod, iPhone or an iPad either—but by stepping into his customer’s shoes and understanding their emotional and psychological desires, Jobs was able to anticipate mass-market trends, because they were rooted in behavior he could validate with not only his deep imagination but also with his sharp eyes and ears.
The link is not only ironic, it is also perceptible. Court records from a recent lawsuit between Apple and Samsung have resulted in much previously confidential information becoming public record. Among the findings: Apple’s investment in market research and its vast user experience teams are likely unparalleled. Jobs didn’t waste time asking consumers directly: “What do you want us to make?” But you can be sure Apple is obsessed with understanding human behavior and that the company uses consumer insights to help drive innovation.
Embracing Consumer Insights
For the restaurant industry, there has never been greater potential. Economic prosperity and discretionary spending have largely recovered from 2008-2009 recession levels. According to the National Restaurant Association, A
mericans today make nearly half of their food purchases away from home. In 1955 it was 25 percent. In the United States, restaurant sales are expected to reach $683 billion in 2014, a $100 billion increase from just four years ago.
The pressure to increase operational efficiencies and turn as many tables per day as possible, without sacrificing customer service, also puts the spotlight on design as a critically important component for a restaurant’s success. As such, understanding the psyche of a hospitality patron has never been more critically important for a business owner.
Leisure, Seriously
Leisure design is what YWS Design & Architecture does. It’s all the firm does.
The firm has deep expertise in hospitality, gaming, retail, dining and entertainment environments—in other words, places for people who love leisure and seek memorable experiences wherever they go.
At an integrated resort, successful delivery of that coveted experience relies on a sophisticated blending of each environment and a thoughtful integration of operations with innovative design.
Thirteen years ago, YWS was founded in the birthplace of the integrated resort—Las Vegas. The founding partners and executives are pioneers in the industry, having been responsible for resort giants like Bellagio and Mirage.
As Las Vegas has grown, so has YWS. It has expanded globally to add offices in the world’s top leisure destinations: Singapore, Macau and Tulsa, Oklahoma, the home of YWS’ Native American services hub. The company has worked with the biggest names in the business: MGM Resorts International, Crown Resorts, Wynn Resorts, Boyd Gaming and Resorts World. YWS also has partnered with entrepreneurial developers throughout Asia and beyond. Services also include interiors, with the belief that a well-designed project’s extraordinary outside must be in harmony with its remarkable inside.
YWS has grown its team of talent to always ensure fresh and bold ideas. The company is committed to this industry and its future. It is serious about leisure.
The vital piece of the YWS equation comes in the form of the three C’s:
Creativity: YWS’ international design team ensures that the environments it creates are unique, memorable and grounded in consumer insights.
Collaboration: As leisure design experts, YWS knows a lot about creating integrated resorts. It can design casino floors with optimal flow, craft a beautifully integrated podium, and conceive a layout that creates energy and an enduring vibe. What’s needed is the client’s vision. YWS’ job is to align its expertise with that vision.
Certainty: This is where art takes a back seat to science. YWS is very serious about the way projects are delivered. It’s no secret that projects run on money, time and resources—each must be monitored and balanced to deliver a project on schedule, on budget and to the promised design. YWS has made project execution a scientific process. The only looks of surprise should be delighted ones—at the grand opening.
For more information, visit ywsinternational.com.
Celebrating Sahara
The new SLS Las Vegas promises to bring new glitz and glamour to Las Vegas. Its nightclub scene and unique hospitality business are expected to break new ground on the northern end of the Strip. But the SLS is a true reflection of the hotel it replaced, within the same core structure: the Sahara.
It was one of the seminal casinos in Las Vegas—one that they actually named major roads after. The Sahara was the sixth resort to open on the Las Vegas Strip when it debuted in 1952 under the ownership of Milton Prell, replacing Club Bingo, which opened in 1947. It was built by Del Webb, who later bought it from Prell. The Strip’s first high-rise tower was built adjacent to the Sahara in 1959 and a second 24-story tower was added in 1963, the tallest building in Las Vegas at the time.
From the beginning, the Sahara was all about entertainment. In 1956, the first casino lounge on the Strip opened at the Sahara bringing together legendary performers, jazz musician Louis Prima, singer Keely Smith and sax player Sam Butera. Quickly they became the hottest act in Vegas, and guests flocked to the Sahara to see them.
Later, dozens of renowned performers appeared at the Sahara. Just a short list includes such luminaries as Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., Judy Garland, Marlene Dietrich, Lena Horne, Jack Benny, Tony Bennett, Paul Anka, George Carlin, Liza Minnelli, Johnny Carson, Buddy Hackett, Helen O’Connell, Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy, Kay Starr, Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gorme, Don Rickles, Sonny & Cher and many others. In 1964 the Beatles stayed at the Sahara while performing for two nights at the Las Vegas Convention Center.
In the early 1980s, Del Webb sold out to the Archon Corp., operated by longtime gaming executive Paul Lowden. Archon sold the Sahara three years later to another Las Vegas legend, Bill Bennett, one of the founders of Circus Circus. Bennett added a 27-story tower in 1987, and a new porte cochere and pool area in ’97. He owned the property until his death in 2002.
Toward the end of its life, ownership tried several things, including a roller coaster—Speed, the Ride—which made a trip around several loops in front of the hotel, and later a NASCAR Café, which failed to garner much attention.
When sbe Entertainment CEO and founder Sam Nazarian bought the hotel in 2007, he planned to raze most of it and start from scratch. But the economic recession intervened and made the original buildings of the Sahara something of a rarity: a survivor.
SLS Las Vegas includes many tributes to the Sahara if you look closely enough, including the Congo Room, the hotel’s main ballroom that retained its original name, as well as iconic photographs of the place in its glory days.
The Bottom Line
Whether planning a new casino or expanding an existing one, one of the most important questions an owner can ask is: “Which amenities are the best choices for my casino?” And while the answer is not always obvious, finding the right response can be crucial to your success, especially in today’s highly competitive gaming environment.
Perhaps the best answer to the non-gaming amenities question is another question: Which will bring the most income to the casino per dollar invested? All amenities added to a casino property will be of some value, but determining those that provide the most value will have significant impact on your bottom line.
Of course, finding the right mix of non-gaming amenities will depend on the particular property, its unique market area, and the competition. But, clearly, building those that produce the highest financial return makes a good deal of sense. You may be surprised to learn that two of the standout financial performers will be found nowhere near the casino floor: hotel rooms and parking garages. Here’s how these amenities can benefit your casino business:
• A parking garage can turn the worst casino day into a great casino day. Regardless of the casino’s location, there will be days when guests just don’t want to park on a surface lot or walk any distance. Maybe it’s snowing, or raining. Maybe it’s just too hot outside. The fact is, any inclement day has the power to keep your guests in the comfort of their homes and away from the casino floor.
Even on nice days, when the casino is busy, some guests may not visit because they don’t relish driving around looking for a spot—and then walking a mile to the casino entrance. But, you say, I can solve those problems by offering valet parking, right? Well, yes and no. Many people are touchy about leaving their cars with strangers, especially teenagers, even if the service is free. But give those same people a sheltered parking space, close to the casino door, and they’ll be more inclined to visit whenever the mood strikes them.
• Hotel rooms add to casino profits in much the same way. It seems obvious that adding a couple hundred hotel rooms would improve gaming revenue. But most owners don’t know that the hotel’s actual financial results exceed most forecasts. First, GMs report that a hotel operation on-property enhances the casino’s image as an entertainment destination—even for those guests not planning to spend the night. And, more important to the casino owner, the hotel will attract guests who don’t live within easy driving distance of the property. And let’s not forget one of the fundamental “truths” about the casino/hotel combination: one night’s stay means two days play.
So which non-gaming amenities are the most profitable for the casino? Let’s consider the numbers: A parking garage represents a one-time cost to the owner of about $14,000 per space—but in most cases it will increase casino floor revenue by $10,000 per space year-on-year (you can assume $19-$38 per day per slot, on average). That’s a whopping ROI of 70 percent.
And hotel rooms? Here, too, the ROI will fall somewhere between 35 percent and 70 percent, depending on the property. If you examine typical returns on other “traditional” casino amenities—movie theaters, conference spaces, banquet centers—you’ll see they all fall well below that 35 percent hotel-room threshold (see chart).
Bringing up the rear of non-gaming performers list? High-end restaurants, concert venues and golf courses. Quite a few casino owners have come to realize that these kinds of “attractions,” when profitable, have ROIs in the low single digits—and in all too many cases operate at a loss.
For this reason alone, these kinds of casino amenities should be considered very carefully before the cost of building them is added to a new casino’s development budget.
Ancillary Facilities – Gaming Return on Investment
Facility Gaming Revenue Project Cost (Average) Annual Gaming ROI
Parking Garage
$10,400 per space per year ($19-$38/day) $14,000/space 74%
RV Park
Assume 50% Occupancy (35% to 70% is typical) $25,000/pad 72%
$100 per occupied pad/day = $18,000 per pad/yr
Movie Theaters
200 Guests per seat per year $6,500/seat 45%
Hotel Rooms
Assume 75% occupancy (65% to 85% is typical) $130,000/room 37%
$180 per occupied room night = $49,000 per room/yr
Conference/Convention/Banquet Center
Assume 37% occupancy (25%-45% is typical) $6,500/seat 35%
= 132 attendees per seat/yr
At 17 per attendee = $2,300 per seat/yr
Entertainment (Concert) Center
Average use is 1 event per week filled to capacity $7,000/seat 7%
= 50 people per seat/yr
$10 per person = $500 per seat/yr
Golf (18 Holes)
27,000 rounds per yr (20,000 to 35,000 rounds typical) $14,000/space 4%
$20 per golfer ($10 to $30 is typical)
= $550,000 per course/yr
1. No consideration has been given for land cost. Project cost includes construction, FF&E,
architects and engineers fees.
2. No income for the facility operations is included. It is assumed that the facility runs at
break-even.
3. Gaming revenues and project costs are averages; obviously, they will vary from case to case.
4. It is assumed here that additional net gaming revenue goes straight to the bottom line. It should
be recognized that at some point there would be added costs associated with the additional play.
5. Gaming income has been gathered from a variety of sources, put primarily from Klas Robinson.
6. Project cost estimates provided by Thalden Boyd Emery Architects and The Cumming Group.
Don’t Stop With Interior Design
Much More Than Uniforms
Cintas Corporation has been bringing the right image to casinos all across North America for more than 80 years. Cintas’ suite of Gaming Solutions helps bring casino brands to life and enrich any casino’s guest experience by ensuring all of the details are addressed.
From the casino floor to the back door, Cintas’ specialized solutions save casinos time and money with the simplicity of a consolidated service partner.
As a leader in the uniform industry for nearly 50 years, the tenure among the Cintas design team is unmatched, with 115-plus years of image apparel industry experience. Located in Las Vegas, Cintas Gaming Design Studio focuses on designing unique image apparel programs that complement any casino brand vision or brand message through high-end, highly functional uniforms.
While comfort, functionality and durability remain important aspects of any uniform program, many clients are placing additional emphasis on retail-inspired, on-trend apparel, which has positioned Cintas as a design powerhouse with a team of elite designers.
Cintas is much more than uniforms. The company’s specialized Gaming Solutions programs help improve guest satisfaction and ensure a clean, safe and impressive indoor and outdoor environment for any casino. As a result, Cintas’ Gaming Solutions include branded floor mats and deep cleaning of tile, carpet and air conditioning units, in addition to safety programs such as first aid cabinets, training and even AEDs.
For more information about Cintas Corporation, visit cintas.com/gaming or call 1-800-864-3676.
Telling A Story
A transparent glass tower that reflects the ripples of Lake Michigan pierces the Milwaukee, Wisconsin skyline to welcome guests to the Potawatomi Hotel & Casino.
“It’s a very exciting project from a design perspective,” says John Culligan, director of architectural operations for the Cuningham Group, designers of the new hotel in Milwaukee, which had its ribbon-cutting October 1.
The Forest County Potawatomi have an existing casino and events center downtown. The $150 million, 19-story Potawatomi Hotel adds 381 rooms, including 16 suites. The 3,000-square-foot presidential suite gives a tremendous view of downtown Milwaukee and Lake Michigan.
“The concept we follow in developing a design is that every building tells a story,” says Culligan. “We collaborate closely with our clients to tell their story insofar as their business culture and clientele.”
Yongkoo Lee, the project’s architectural designer, says, “We started with the client’s desire to create a modern and iconic hotel tower, which would represent the tribe to their city and state—something they could extend along the skyline. We tried to create a building that would tell the story. We created a transparent glass tower whose skin reflects the excitement of the city.”
They designed a torchiere symbolizing that the tribe is known as “Keeper of the Fire.” The slim tower is topped by a beacon 20 feet tall that illuminates in multi-colors, projects logos and can advertise special events. At the top, large letters spell Potawatomi.
Rising from the Menomonee Valley, an old industrial part of Milwaukee with few multi-story buildings, the tower is designed in a three-story podium. “From afar the roof flows into the casino,” says Lee. “You can see it for miles, and that builds excitement as you arrive.”
Clad in off-white metal panels, from a distance it looks like a light glass tower, although it is structurally strong. The off-white distinguishes it from the gray industrial valley. “It’s modern, it’s fresh, it’s excitement and entertainment,” Lee says. “It has an extensive presence on the skyline.
“We tried to replicate the design architecture of the casino, seamlessly creating the new building. You enter a whimsical porte cochere, which is an abstract form of an eagle about to take off.” Eagles are, of course, very potent symbols to almost all Indian tribes.
Interior designer Janet Whaley adds, “Our new tower promises the experience of excitement. The two-story lobby delivers on that promise. It’s a walk through a stylistic forest. A lot of inspiration came from their existing casino. We took that as a starting point and wanted to reference nature but in a modern and abstract way.”
Columns rendered as tall trees disappear into canopies covered in color-changing LEDs that create different moods. The walls have a modern interpretation in veneered woods. Adding to the “wow factor” is a large hand-painted glass mural of Lake Michigan behind the front desk, a single large piece of white stone.
Compared to other hotel suites, this one has full floor-to-ceiling windows with great views. While not the lap of luxury of the Presidential Suite they will, at very least, make you feel like royalty.
Owner: Forest County Potawatomi Tribe
Architect: Cuningham Group Architecture, Inc.
Contractor: Gilbane Building Co.
Total Investment: $150 million
Iowa Landmark
Start with a century-old Iowa warehouse known for its weathered brick walls, commanding six-story clock tower (complete with roof battlements!) and stunning views of the wide Missouri. Add an iconic entertainment brand and a 50-foot electric guitar. What have you got? The Hard Rock Hotel and Casino Sioux City.
Sioux City Entertainment invested more than $128 million to transform the former Battery Building into an integrated gaming resort with a 54-room boutique Hard Rock Hotel, indoor and outdoor concert venues, a bevy of restaurants, bars and retail shops, and of course, a Hard Rock Shop. The Lobby Bar is a statement unto itself: the three-story marvel, with a towering liquor display filled with hundreds of bottles, replaces the traditional reception area and offers a unique welcome to guests.
Then there’s the casino. The 50,000-square-foot gaming floor, with more than 800 slot machines and several dozen table games, sports a purple leopard-patterned carpet, decorative light fixtures bearing purple drumsticks, and the trademark oversized Hard Rock guitar. From every direction, guests can see iconic black-and-white images of their favorite rockers, including Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Billy Idol and Peter Frampton, and concert posters from bands like the Ramones, the Stones, Devo and the Cure. There’s plenty of rock memorabilia from stars like the Beatles, Michael Jackson and Kid Rock, and a stage costume once worn by Mick Jagger.
The rock ‘n’ roll theme continues at Anthem, an 800-seat concert hall with an old-style marquee at the entryway, and the World Tour Buffet, which includes a full wall of multicolored cassette tapes.
The 100,000-square-foot structure at Third and Water streets—a sterling example of Romanesque revival architecture—dates back to 1905. It opened in 1906 as a manufacturing plant for scissors and cutlery, and in the 1940s became a battery factory.
Throughout the redevelopment, working in concert with Sioux City Entertainment’s nonprofit partner, Missouri River Historical Development, architectural firm Friedmutter Group of Las Vegas was careful to maintain the original brick and much of the original timber, giving the Hard Rock an edgy, industrial look inside and out. Massive archways, where cargo trains once pulled into the warehouse, have been preserved. Vintage brick has been retained even in the guest rooms, all of which have views of downtown Sioux City or the Missouri River.
Not surprisingly, the resort was an immediate hit with the public, artistically and economically. More than 214,000 people visited the casino floor in the Hard Rock’s opening month and wagered nearly $7.2 million, getting the new destination off to a great start.
Operator: SCE Partners LLC, an affiliate of Warner Gaming
Architect/Interior Designer: Friedmutter Group
Investment: $130 million all-in / $48 million construction
Sweet Dreams
The Philippine gaming market has been attracting much attention over the past year. With the opening of the Solaire in Manila’s “Entertainment City,” a four-resort complex on the shores of Manila Bay owned by PAGCOR, the Philippine casino operator/regulator, anticipation is building for the remaining three properties.
At the end of 2014, City of Dreams Manila is slated to open, operated by Melco Crown, which also owns the Macau casino resort of the same name. Like its Macau cousin, CoD Manila will host multiple hotels and other non-gaming amenities.
Included in Manila, as in Macau, will be a Crown Tower and a Hyatt. But CoD Manila also will feature the first Nobu Hotel in Asia. The partnership between Melco Crown and Nobu Hospitality includes the internationally renowned chef, Nobu Matsuhisa, actor Robert DeNiro and Hollywood producer Meir Teper. The hotel will include a Nobu restaurant and offer a fusion of laid-back luxury, high-energy nightlife and exclusive guest room retreats and spa services.
Melco Crown has also struck a deal with the “King of Clubs,” Michael Van Cleef Ault, who will bring his nightclub brands Pangaea and Chaos to the CoD Manila. Both brands are known for hosting “A-List” celebrities and will transform Manila into a true nightclub haven in Asia.
Another first for CoD Manila will be the only DreamWorks “edutainment center,” a collaboration with DreamWorks Animation. An integrated space of live and digital play spaces, the center will stress learning through play.
“DreamPlay by DreamWorks” is a revolutionary approach to family entertainment. Each experience is designed exclusively for City of Dreams Manila by the artistic and creative forces of DreamWorks Animation and iP2 Entertainment to combine the best elements of the DreamWorks library with the hands-on activities of an education-inspired play center to create a truly one-of-a-kind family adventure. Children will interact with characters from DreamWorks Animation’s franchises including Kung Fu Panda, Shrek, Madagascar and How to Train Your Dragon.
The debut of City of Dreams Manila demonstrates how the Philippine market is growing. In addition to two more resorts scheduled to open at Entertainment City (Kazuo Okada’s Tiger Entertainment and a second Philippine resort owned by Genting/Travellers), Caesars Entertainment has proposed a $1 billion resort adjacent to Manila’s Ninoy Aquino International Airport.
Owner: Belle Corp. Leisure and Resorts World Corp., and Melco Crown
Architect of Record: ASYA Design Partners
Contractor: Leighton Contractors (Philippines) Inc..
Investment: $1.3 billion
Heart of Glass
If necessity is the mother of invention, the people behind Hard Rock International’s new Platinum Tower, on the Gulf Coast of Biloxi, Mississippi, are the Edisons of architecture.
The resort started with a good problem: more demand for rooms than it could consistently handle. But the only land available for expansion was a narrow tract hugging the waterfront adjacent to the original Royal Hotel.
The design team turned that limitation into an asset with its innovative “svelte tower” approach. The $32 million, 12-story hotel, which opened in February, follows the curve of the coastline, frames the palm-fringed outdoor pool, and stands as a testament to the region’s recovery since Hurricane Katrina, when Mississippi’s former riverboat casinos first moved ashore.
The building’s horizontal banding complements that of the existing tower, and silver glazing inspired the “Platinum” brand.
The sleek design continues inside. The curvilinear guest rooms are contemporary but uber-comfy, with lighted zebra-wood wardrobes, built-in seating, plush wall-to-wall headboards, double vanities, custom furnishings and art, and contemporary accent lighting. Suites are outfitted with personal wet bars, and make abundant use of millwork on the walls and ceilings.
The room layouts turn tradition on its ear. “Because we had a very narrow site to work with, we rotated the rooms 90 degrees, so the longer dimensions are along the outside walls,” says Brad Schulz, vice president of architectural firm Bergman Walls & Associates of Las Vegas. “It’s one of the first times this has been done in the United States. It’s a very popular look, and it’s been well-received by the public.”
That skewed orientation continues in the baths. Dispensing with the box-within-a-box design that is typical of most hotel bathrooms, Bergman Walls pushed the baths to the outside walls. As a result, natural light floods in through banks of windows. “They have a provocative aspect to them,” observes Schulz. “If you don’t put the drapes or blinds down, it could get kind of interesting. But it’s sexy, and people are having fun with it.”
The baths are richly appointed; many have oversized showers and marble Australian soaking tubs fitted with multi-head rain-shower faucets.
Thanks to floor-to-ceiling windows, the 140 guest rooms, first-floor Cabana Suites and penthouse-level Sky Suites are akin to glass houses, with panoramic views of the city, the Gulf, and that iconic, neon-lit Hard Rock guitar.
The style, like the brand, is playful, irreverent and hip. And of course, the resort is packed to the rafters with music memorabilia from superstar rockers: Gene Simmons, Buddy Guy, Sammy Hagar, Bret Michaels, Johnny Cash and many others.
Lucky guests can even get a glimpse of Elvis Presley’s pajamas, proving this place is really fit for a king.
Owner: Premier Entertainment Biloxi, LLC
Architect: Bergman Walls & Associates
Interior Designer: Tandem Interior Design Studio
Contractor: Roy Anderson Corp.
Total Investment: $32 million
Industry Leader
Friedmutter Group is an award-winning, internationally recognized design, architecture, master planning and interior design firm specializing 100 percent in multi-use hospitality/casino/entertainment projects of all sizes.
Founded in 1992 by Brad Friedmutter exclusively to provide services to gaming/hospitality clients, Friedmutter Group has been identified as a leader and innovator throughout the industry. From core and shell architectural design to interior fit-out, Friedmutter Group provides high-quality, iconic design solutions for clients.
The firm has gained critical understanding of the many required elements of the industry, from site selection and development to operating fundamentals, while successfully creating unique design and guiding completion of gaming and hospitality projects in existing and new markets around the world.
Brad Friedmutter, a registered architect in 43 states, holds an unrestricted Nevada gaming license and has been in the gaming and hospitality industry for more than 35 years.
Friedmutter Group remains at the forefront of innovation, design and leadership in the casino/hospitality industry with current projects including MGM Macau and Cotai, Studio City Macau and recently opened projects including Horseshoe Baltimore, Graton Casino & Hotel, Harrah’s Southern California Resort & Casino and Hard Rock Casino Sioux City. Additional recently completed projects include Horseshoe Cincinnati Casino, Twin Arrows Resort Casino and Horseshoe Cleveland Casino.
Friedmutter Group successfully has completed projects well in excess of $15 billion, and has won many industry and design accolades through the years, including Architectural Design Company of the Year (2006, American Gaming Institute and Reed Exhibitions); National Design-Build Award of Excellence for Quechan Resort Casino (2009, Design-Build Institute of America); and numerous industry design awards.
In addition, Brad Friedmutter frequently has been honored for his myriad contributions to the industry, including induction into the 2009 Hospitality Design Platinum Circle, honoring career achievement in the hospitality industry; the 2008 Hospitality Industry Network Lifetime Achievement Award; and the prestigious 2007 Sarno Lifetime Achievement Award for Casino Design.
Friedmutter Group is honored to work with a wide range of owners and operators, including MGM Resorts International, Caesars Entertainment, Station Casinos, Hard Rock International, Melco-Crown Entertainment, the Navajo Nation and many others.
Friedmutter Group’s expertise, reputation and dedication have produced a more than 90 percent rate of repeat business from these and other clients. The firm values these relationships and friendships enormously and is grateful to participate in the success of their endeavors.
For more information, visit fglv.com.
Castle in Spain
Many contemporary office buildings look like monuments to conformity. In ages past, however, especially in the world’s great cities, architects built offices that were downright palatial.
Take the Academy of Commercial and Industrial Unions on Madrid’s Gran Via. Built in 1924, it has all the hallmarks of the neoclassical style: towering Greco-Roman columns, a dramatic domed roof, a marble grand staircase, and according to a history of the structure, “a succession of arches reminiscent of the Monterrey Palace in Salamanca.”
By the turn of the new millennium, the landmark building—by then an employment office—had seen better days. Thanks to a painstaking renovation, it’s enjoying new life as the Casino Gran Via. The resort is operated by the Comar Group, which owns 36 casinos and gaming halls around the world, including 10 in Spain.
It took a lot of work. “The building was run down, but we fell in love with it,” says Aleksey Belinskiy, studio leader at the Amsterdam office of Steelman Partners, architects for the project. “The attention to detail and the amount of craftsmanship that went into these buildings are just incredible.”
That includes a center atrium that soars up to a stained glass skylight. The skylight solved a problem for the architects, says Belinskiy: “Urban casinos are challenging to build, because they often end up on two to three levels. It’s hard to move people up and down, so the visual connection between various levels is critical.”
The skylight, by Parisian glassmaker Maumejean and original to the building, instantly draws the eye upward. And it’s especially striking at night. “We backlit it and frontlit it with a special LED mesh that creates almost an interactive video effect,” says Belinskiy. “It’s spectacular.”
Throughout the renovation, many elements of the 90-year-old building had to be brought up to code or otherwise restored. “The existing concrete slab would not support the required load, and most of the floors had to be restructured. Because of all the systems that go inside the ceiling cavities, it was pretty challenging to keep the ceilings high and also maintain some of the design elements we wanted. Much of the decorative trim and molding had to be replaced. It was really hands-on site administration.”
The work has paid off. The former municipal office building, set along one of Europe’s most famous thoroughfares, has become a world-class entertainment center “in the style of the grand palaces of Russia and Paris,” says Belinskiy.
The street level features a café, reception area, game room with 65 slot machines, and a cocktail bar and lounge. The mezzanine includes a baccarat room with an Asian motif; gaming tables with American roulette, blackjack and poker; a traditional Basque restaurant operated by Chef Jesús Santos; and a gourmet Champagnería.
On the third floor is the opulent ballroom, now a gaming floor lit by eight-foot chandeliers.
“It’s one of the most beautiful spaces in Europe,” says Belinskiy. “When we first walked into that room, I realized we had this absolute jewel in the middle of Gran Via, and nobody knew about it. We were excited to see it restored, not just for business reasons but from an architectural point of view. It felt right that we had a chance to give this building a new, re-energized look.”
Comar Group Director General Javier García says Casino Gran Via, which opened in December 2013, was built “with the aim of contributing to the revitalization of leisure and tourism in Madrid. The iconic building, the team of excellent professionals, the facilities and the exclusive design make the Casino Gran Via a leisure experience of reference in Europe.”
The old office building “was a great find,” says Belinskiy. “And it really is breathtaking.”
Owner: Comar Group
Project Design: Steelman Partners Europe
Area: 14,800 square feet
Investment: $18.8 million
Harbor Master
The Seneca Buffalo Creek Casino in Buffalo, New York completed its final phase in August, a keystone in revitalizing Buffalo’s Inner Harbor area. Reviving this underused industrial property was a special interest for the Seneca Nation, which has historical ties to this land.
Paul Bell, project manager, and Nathan Peak, lead designer for Hnedak Bobo Group, say a critical design factor is that the casino is two blocks from Niagara Center, home of the NHL’s Buffalo Sabres.
“We did master-plan studies with how it would work with that planned downtown district area,” Bell says. “Rather than enclosing it as an island, we wanted many access points to other businesses. Plugging into what was already there and what was already happening was pretty exciting.” They oriented the casino’s size, gaming, food and beverage to attract from the surrounding community and fuel Inner Harbor’s redevelopment.
The Seneca Nation wanted to create a world-class gaming destination to capture Buffalo’s regional gaming market. But that was only part of it.
“The corner of the building we dedicated to a park, where there is a small hill,” says Bell. “We carved through the middle of that hill, and set aside a quarter of the site to a park. We wanted to make the core large enough to accommodate art festivals and other multi-faceted events. There was a lot of commitment from the Seneca Nation to invest in a public-space area.”
“That created design challenges,” adds Peak. “We had a fixed site, and one block of downtown parking was not sufficient, so we had to have a parking garage (four levels with 725 spaces). We balanced that with the open space. It added a lot of breadth and decompression.”
The 64,000-square-foot, $130 million Buffalo Creek Casino has 808 slots, 18 table games, a high-limit slots area, the 24-seat BC Café, the 120-seat Buffalo Savors restaurant and the 50-seat Stixx Sports Bar, set in the center of the casino floor. A hockey theme dominates with a 360-degree sculpture of Baltic Birch plywood sticks representing abstract hockey sticks. Mirrors behind the bar are backlit to suggest ice. A lacrosse netting pattern is woven into the carpeting.
The project originated in 2008 on a much larger scale with an existing steel frame. “We designed the building reusing 90 percent of that steel,” says Bell. “That was a huge savings to the owner and a sustainable design approach. That should be of interest to anyone who has a similar situation.”
Working closely with the tribe, the team abstracted tribal elements and integrated them into the design. “We abstracted a single feather into a pylon,” says Peak. “The interstate is elevated, so passing motorists look down on the casino. That was a very important design element. The pylon is illuminated 70 feet tall from the base.”
Smaller pylons, one for each of the nation’s clans, light the Seneca Walk leading to the entrance. The casino’s interior design represents cultural elements, with a “Tree of Peace” drawing the eye to the center of the gaming floor.
Owner: The Seneca Nation
Architect: Hnedak Bobo Group
Contractor: Seneca Construction Management Corporation
Investment: $130 million
Boiling Over
Celebrity Chef Rick Moonen made a huge splash in Las Vegas when he opened rm seafood in 2005, the rare seafood restaurant in Las Vegas that actually delivered fresh and sustainable fish and crustaceans. He has now created his Rx Boiler Room on the top floor of his existing rm seafood restaurant at Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas.
This new restaurant is the chef’s “playhouse,” allowing guests to indulge in the chef’s alter ego. The interior celebrates the sub-genre associated with science fiction and inspired by industrialized Western civilization of the 19th century affectionately known as steampunk. From industrial hardware to swooping velveteen fabrics, the steampunk-inspired elements surrounding the dining experience evoke Moonen’s creative process of playful pairing, inventive illustration and culinary mixing.
The bar dazzles with its high energy amid a haphazard collection of tools and artifacts. It is a stage with mixologists performing their “magic.” Imagine Jules Verne using scrap materials to create wondrous machines of an imaginary future, and you’ll have an idea of what Moonen was dreaming when he conceived this concept.
The expert mixologists “perform” with a variety of appliances and unexpected materials, such as blocks of ice, to keep everyone guessing as to the next cocktail produced. The innovative operations take surgical skills to produce libations like none other.
Of course, the food is the star of the show, as Moonen puts a new take on “comfort food” served on large and small plates. Perfect for sharing, some of the menu items include brioche toast with tomato jam with bacon wrapped around a sunny-side-up quail egg, braised oxtail croquettes with a lemon aioli, a Greek-style lamb osso bucco, and a very playful calamari and meatballs in squid ink tomato sauce, all served in both the playfully lush dining rooms and at the interactively intimate bar.
Interior Designer: Cleo Design
Architect: Moser Architecture Studio
Design Director: Roni Fields Design
Contractor: Tré Builders
Hometown Racino
Take a pre-engineered metal building and bring the whole project to completion in a third of the budgeted time and half the cost—that’s a cause for celebration. But the Miami Valley Gaming Racetrack & Casino, developed on 130 acres in Lebanon, Ohio, while located in a simple square building, gives off vibes of something rich and exciting, but also comfortable, so that people are starting to identify it as their “hometown” casino.
The racino, owned by Delaware North Companies and Churchill Downs Inc., opened in December 2013. It offers harness racing with 1,600 video lottery terminals (VLTs) and no tables, with room for up to 2,800 VLTs. It is one of seven racinos in Ohio.
“The exciting thing about this project is that from approval to design to development took 13 months,” says Nick Schoenfeldt, vice president, principal and senior project manager for Thalden Boyd Emery Architects. “We built on a very tight budget and brought it in $6 million under budget.”
It is a simple building—a large square with appendages—but a lot has been done with it. Guests arrive in a grand lobby with split-face marble on the walls. Cars can be brought directly into the lobby for giveaways or display. Patrons are immediately immersed in an environment of richness. “Everything that people touch is real: marble, real stone, wood, and reclaimed barn wood in some of the restaurants,” Schoenfeldt says. “It’s become the place that people identify as their hometown casino.
“It wasn’t under-designed or over-designed,” he says. “People feel comfortable with it. It has the right mix of pattern and color and it feels cohesive.”
The interior and exterior lighting for this large atrium is provided by programmable color changing LEDs. This provides a lot of variation in the lighting and a lot of touch points. It brings the building to life at night. Video boards along walkways leading to the entrance inform guests what is going on inside.
The floor layout is very simple, creating a restaurant-row effect for the fine dining area, buffet area, sports bar, casual dining area and coffee bar. The gaming floor in the shape of an L allows for expansion.
Although many casinos are trending away from catering to smokers, the Miami was designed with an outdoor smoking area served by lottery terminals.
It came in under budget and way ahead of schedule because everybody worked from the same page. “All three of us, including the construction manager, worked with the goal of getting the property open,” says Schoenfeldt. “It was a synthesis of all of the groups. It was integrated project delivery without the contractual operations. We were all on the same page from the first moment.
“Bill Farish, chairman of Churchill Downs, has said, ‘Wow, this is our finest facility!’ That’s something we love to hear.”
Good Bones
Time was, when a hotel in Las Vegas fell into disuse, disrepair and a lack of capital reinvestment, the choice was simple. Knock it down and start over.
But those days are gone, if you can trust the recent trends of renovate, repurpose and restore for older buildings along the Las Vegas Strip, often bringing new brands to the city. The “hotel within a hotel” concept has many examples in Las Vegas, from the Four Seasons at Mandalay Bay to the El Cortez Cabana Suites in Downtown Las Vegas. But the radical renovations of existing structures didn’t really come to fruition until the past few years.
When Caesars Palace decided to renovate one of the property’s original towers back in 2011, it wasn’t just going to throw up new wallpaper and lay down different carpeting. Caesars Entertainment reached a partnership agreement with Nobu Hotels, an offshoot of Nobu Hospitality, a company headed by famous Japanese chef Nobu Matsuhisa. Along with another celebrity partner, actor Robert DeNiro, the company created a high-end “boutique” hotel that is just off the Caesars Palace casino floor.
The introduction of new brands to Las Vegas is good for the town, says Gigi Vega, general manager of the 181-room Nobu Hotel and a Caesars luxury hotel operations executive.
“There is a need now to find a reason to come to Las Vegas, and we’re trying to create that need by having a different experience,” she says.
Boutique hotels and the related amenities also open up Las Vegas to more markets, says Seyhmus Baloglu, UNLV professor and assistant dean of the Harrah’s Hotel College.
“The marketing focus has always been on the number of heads rather than average spending per person on their visit,” Baloglu told Vegas.com in 2012. “Mass tourism is very important for Las Vegas given the room and meeting space capacity. However, there is a market out there who would be interested in gaming or non-gaming niche and boutique concepts. They should be promoted, listed, and made available in multiple online and offline distribution channels, which could further diversify the tourism product Las Vegas offers.”
Cromwell Achievement
Across the street from Caesars Palace, Caesars Entertainment took over the Barbary Coast in 2007. After considering several plans for the property, the company decided to renovate and rebrand. The original idea of rebranding the hotel as the well-known boutique Gansevoort brand went by the wayside when one of the Gansevoort investors was alleged to have ties to organized crime. Thus the name Cromwell was born, and Caesars is building the brand from the ground up.
A true boutique hotel (in a city where the 3,000-room Cosmopolitan is considered “boutique”), the Cromwell has 188 rooms, which includes 19 suites.
Eileen Moore, who oversees operations at the Linq, Flamingo and Cromwell hotels, says the idea was to provide a higher-level customer with more personal service.
“We’ll get to know our customers on a much more intimate level,” she says. “Being stand-alone is probably the most unique aspect of that property. So literally, customers will pull off of Flamingo Boulevard, drive a very short distance into our porte cochere, walk 10 to 15 feet to their front desk, walk in, again, another 10 to 15 to the elevator, straight to their room.”
Karie Hall, the general manager at the Cromwell, says this isn’t a property that wants its guests in the casino the entire time.
“The suites are really built for socializing,” she says. “Full-size refrigerators and wet bar areas, and designed with the whole social process in mind, of getting ready, and getting prepared for a nightlife experience. All the details were thought about in those rooms. And then, it’s a luxury hotel experience, so we have our own private gym. We have many of the great amenities and surprise elements that you’ll find when you check in. And we want it to be an experience where guests always find something new going on in the hotel and the property.”
The property’s signature feature is the rooftop Drai’s nightclub/dayclub. Victor Drai pioneered the nightclub scene in Las Vegas with a club of the same name, in the same hotel, except when it was the Barbary Coast. Moore says it is the best nightclub in the city.
“That space is one of the best spaces that’s available in this market,” she says. “And then to have it on the rooftop and be so expansive… Unlike many other clubs, where only a few private VIP tables have the best view, Victor is truly a visionary and designed this club so that the massive amount of people that will go through it, will all get access to that view and that experience.”
Hall says she has been impressed with Drai’s attention to detail and the experience.
“He thinks about it from the moment you walk in,” she says. “What is your first look, what’s the first thing you see, how is it visually stimulating if you’re not at the property, but maybe you’re staying at Caesars, or you’re staying down the Strip, and you’ll be able to see what’s going on there, and want to be a part of that. So he really thinks about it all, and we’re very lucky to have him as a partner. And he challenges us, in our space, to do that as well.”
Style, Luxury, Service
Another nightclub impresario, Sam Nazarian, founder of sbe Entertainment, is part of the next generation after Drai. Through a partnership with MGM, Nazarian operated some of the most successful clubs in Las Vegas (and Los Angels and Miami, as well), including the stunning Hyde at Bellagio.
But Nazarian wanted to take it further and expand his burgeoning hotel empire to Las Vegas. In 2007, Nazarian and his partners purchased the venerable Sahara, with the plan to implode most of it and build from scratch. With the arrival of the Great Recession, however, plans changed. And in 2011 sbe closed down the Sahara, which it had been operating during the planning stages but had learned what worked on the Las Vegas Strip.
“We were running the Sahara during this time,” he says. “I was 30 when I bought it, so we were running it for four years, recognizing a whole new pattern. But at the same time, we were being educated, because there were so many projects that opened between 2007 and 2011—Cosmopolitan being the last. This is how the lifestyle hotel has taken over the Strip.”
Joe Faust is the head of Dakota Development, the branch of sbe Entertainment that develops these hotel, nightclub and restaurant properties. The motto for Dakota is inspiring—“Collaborate with industry visionaries to create culturally transcendent properties that become a place of community for generations.”
Dakota has built properties from greenfields and rebuilt existing buildings. Faust says there are pros and cons to each.
“It’s hard to say whether one is easier than the other,” he says. “Ground-up construction which we have under way in Seattle and in Philadelphia is certainly a lot more straightforward. You’ve got a clean slate and you can kind of design what you want, you can size the rooms the way you want, you can make the
program be what you want it to be.
“But the adaptive reuse and the renovation of properties is also fun. Just the mere fact that you have to work with the box as it is can be very challenging. And it’s actually very exciting to take some of the worst aspects of a building and find a way, through creativity, to make it the best thing about a particular project. We did that a lot at SLS Vegas.”
Heartbreak Hotel
Arash Azarbarzin is the president of sbe Hotels, which includes such brands as SLS, Raleigh, Redbury and others. He says the complexity of the transformation of the Sahara to SLS was a matter of what part of the hotel you were in.
“There are certain areas in the hotel which were added by Mr. (Bill) Bennett, for example—the NASCAR Café, the Sahara Theater, and all of those new areas with high ceilings and very good bones and structure,” he explains. “In those areas, we kept the walls pretty much where they were, and we just enhanced it. There are two towers that Mr. Bennett added in 1989 and ’90, what we call the World Tower today, where we did a very nice renovation, but the bones and infrastructure were great. Other areas, like the old Tunis Tower, which is the Story Tower today, and Alexandria Tower, which is the Lux Tower today, we went down to a complete gut renovation.
“We went down to the concrete. Everything—plumbing, electrical, rises—they were all taken out, and a brand new infrastructure was added. And there was a wooden structure in the middle of the hotel that was the original bingo parlor, that had nine-foot ceilings, and it was really a bottleneck that we completely took out and replaced with a brand-new building.”
Faust says “good bones” means exactly what it sounds like.
“When we were looking at properties to buy early on in Las Vegas, we looked at a handful of different properties to take the lens off and see what’s exactly there. You’re looking at what the structure is, how you can open it up, how you can fit what your ideal vision of the property would be.”
Some properties wouldn’t work, Faust says.
“We looked at the Riviera, and I told Sam that we’d never be able to work with it because of the way it was constructed and built. It had columns and load-bearing walls and all sorts of things coming down so you could never be able to adapt exactly what we wanted to do.”
The Sahara was different, says Faust.
“It had three separate guest room towers. It had a low-rise that was not that terribly old, but you could gut it back to structure and reuse it. And we did a lot of that; we used a lot of the existing MEP systems that were already in place that were in decent shape. Then we put in new and we added things that we needed that didn’t exist in the property. So that’s what ‘good bones’ means. It gives us a good box to work within.”
Although the Sahara brand was going away, Faust says the company wanted to retain that connection with the past.
“When we started designing, we talked a lot with Philippe Starck and our architect, Gensler, how we wanted to hold on to parts and pieces of the history,” he explains. “The Sahara was always an iconic property, and we’re hoping the SLS will be the new iconic property. The day we closed the doors to the Sahara, Sam came to me and said, ‘Take all the ‘S’ door handles and don’t sell them; keep them. I don’t know what we’ll do with them, but hang on to them.’ Subsequent to that, we discussed it, and we made it into a chandelier. Some of the images that we have in the carpet, we wanted to call back to the original Sahara.”
One of those images was a postcard of the old bingo hall, the original structure, woven into the carpet. The new owner retained Congo as the name of the ballroom. “It’s such an iconic room,” says Faust.
Towering Success
The three towers of SLS allow the hotel to offer a different room experience in each, says Azarbarzin.
“In Las Vegas, we have three different room products—completely different,” he explains. “SLS Lux is a super-luxurious product, a larger room. Out of the 286 rooms in that tower, 246 of the rooms are suites, and they all have all the amenities and bells and whistles that you can ask for in any luxurious hotel. And then our more standard rooms are in the World Towers that we created really for the conventioneers, and people who are a little bit more price-conscious. And then there is the Story Tower. It’s only 200 keys, and we wanted to make it more fun for the younger demographics, the people who were going up there for the weekend to a bachelor or bachelorette party, going up there to have a lot of fun.
“So when you go to book a room in Las Vegas at our property, the range can be as much a hundred-dollar difference between our convention room and our luxurious room, but everyone can experience the hotel at their budget level.”
The amenities of the rooms are state of the art, he says, from work-ready desks to 55-inch high-def TVs on which you can download movies, shows or your own content.
Sbe Entertainment is known for its nightclubs, and SLS Las Vegas will have three distinct brands.
“We always knew the Sayers Club was going to go in there,” says Faust. “We wanted it to be the same as it is in Hollywood. In L.A., it is a little bit smaller; it’s more of a living room setting. That’s the excitement of that live performance in a very small environment, so we always knew we were going to have that type of environment for the Sayers Club.
“When we started out with Foxtail, it kind of evolved as we were designing it. It was originally going to be the lounge off the casino, and then we decided we would close it off and embrace the pool, similar to what Wynn did for the Encore Beach Club. We wanted to open up to the pool, embrace the pool, and make it be a little bit of our version of Hyde Bellagio, our nightclub there. But instead of having the fountains as our focus, our swimming pool becomes the focus.”
LiFE, in the former theater, was always going to be the big-box nightclub, Faust says. “We loved the tiered seating that existed when it was the theater, because that’s terrific in a nightclub environment.”
Doing Delano
The lifespan of a hotel in Las Vegas can vary widely. Whether it’s the Golden Gate in Downtown that has survived for more than a century or the ill-fated Fontainebleau, which didn’t even make it to opening day, the popularity of hotels is dependent upon lots of things.
Take THEhotel, the annex to Mandalay Bay that opened in 2003, for example. Just a separate all-suite hotel tower when it first opened, it was branded THEhotel in 2006. Matthew Chilton is the general manager of the new Delano Las Vegas, as it’s called now, and explains the rational behind the most recent rebranding.
“Our president never really liked the name,” he laughs. “It was always, ‘What hotel? THEhotel?’… K
ind of like the old Abbott and Costello bit, ‘Who’s on First.’”
So the rebranding of what had been a quite successful hotel despite the eponymous name had been discussed almost from the start. The partnership with Morgans Hotel Group just made sense. Morgans had been looking for opportunities to expand the Delano brand so popular in Miami’s South Beach (a Delano was supposed to be part of Boyd Gaming’s Echelon project) and MGM was looking for a signature brand.
“We saw Delano fitting into the category, fitting into the Mandalay Bay campus,” says Chilton. “It’s a natural fit. More modern, luxury, driven by a boutique style experience.”
The changes were dramatic, but accomplished without closing down the hotel, a feat that is somewhat amazing given the scope of the changes.
“Everything is different,” says Chilton. “All the rooms were completely done over. The public spaces are all changed. We wanted to make sure all surfaces were touched. It was a total transformation of the entire property. The lobby has a new flow, bringing in designs from the desert. Taking the edge off and warming it up.”
Although a hotel with 1,117 suites isn’t usually described as “boutique”—except perhaps for Cosmopolitan Las Vegas—Chilton says the design takes lessons from true boutique hotels in New York or Miami or Chicago.
“We added these little vignettes of great, comfortable seating to improve guest-stickiness in our lobby,” he says. “It’s more than a transition space. The lounges are getting more visitation, and people are just hanging out in this space to take in the great vibes.”
Unlike the Cromwell, which is an entirely new brand, Delano has some cache, particularly for frequent visitors to Miami Beach.
“There is an audience that is familiar with the brand,” says Chilton. “It’s only 188 rooms so their imprint isn’t as big as ours will be now that we’ve launched marketing to raise awareness.”
The marketing campaign is called “Defiantly Inspired,” and Chilton says his entire staff has taken that to heart.
“It reflects all the different things we’re trying to do with our storytelling and the day-to-night transition when the vibe changes,” he says. “It doesn’t feel like you’re in Las Vegas. We knew there was a desire for this, and it’s being reinforced by some of the other brands that have entered the market lately. It’s a bit of a lifestyle boutique movement, but we’re in our own little niche.”
Despite the fact that the hotel remained open during the renovation, construction on the property was completed within a year.
“When you do room renovations, it’s customary to stay open,” Chilton explains. “But it was new and foreign territory for all of us to open a new hotel while the former one was still operating.
“Essentially, it’s a lot of in-depth coordination with our design team, and then the construction team. We told them what we needed to keep operating. There were lots of temporary walls that were up that simply shifted from side to side as the renovations were completed.
“In my honest opinion, I think it went a lot better than it could have gone. Yes, there are those strings of days when you have to get the old granite up and it’s noisy, but in hindsight, that didn’t last long.”
New restaurants and lounges also got a full makeover at Delano. Della’s Kitchen is described as “historic farmhouse meets urban kitchen.” Franklin, the lobby bar bearing homage to Franklin Delano Roosevelt, is all about “the perfect cocktail,” says Chilton.
But the big changes will come next year when a new restaurant is introduced into the space now occupied by the iconic Mixx restaurant and nightclub at the top of Delano, with its breathtaking views of the Strip. Mixx will disappear but the partnership with Alain Ducasse will continue with the introduction of Rivea, a French restaurant with a Riviera theme, only the third of its kind (other locations are in St. Tropez and London). The lounge area of Mixx will also be renovated with a name and theme to be announced. Chilton will try to recapture the magic of what was once one of the hottest nightclubs in Vegas.
The piece de resistance for Delano will be the beach club, which will occupy part of the 11-acre Mandalay Bay complex, and only available to Delano guests.
“It’s such an important part of the Delano brand, as it is in South Beach,” he says.
Hotel Impossible
So where do we go from here?
Hotel conversions aren’t limited to Las Vegas. Wherever there are older buildings, a hotel conversion is possible.
In Atlantic City, the closure of four and maybe five casinos has opened up the possibilities of re-use of the former casinos. The Claridge, a stately older building that opened as a hotel in 1930, converted to a casino in the 1980s and incorporated into Bally’s Atlantic City in 2003, was sold to a Florida company recently. Reopened as a hotel, the casino area will be repurposed for art galleries and a children’s museum.
In Sioux City, Iowa, the new Hard Rock Casino was converted from a converted warehouse, the Battery Building, built in 1906. The building’s signature clock tower has been retained, but all the modern elements of a Hard Rock hotel are included in the design.
So whatever becomes of this latest trend in casino design, it will only accent the services and amenities offered to gaming customers, combined with the superior customer service that characterizes top casino resorts.
LINQed In
The quest for non-gaming attractions in Las Vegas took a dramatic turn earlier this year with the opening of the Linq, a shopping and dining district nestled among several Caesars Entertainment hotels on the east side of the Strip capped off by the High Roller, the largest observation wheel in the world.
The Caesars Entertainment properties on the east side of the Strip—Harrah’s, Imperial Palace, Flamingo and Bill’s Gamblin’ Hall—were slated at one time for demolition, to be replaced by a CityCenter-like multi-use development. But when the recession hit Las Vegas hard, Caesars went back to the drawing board. The company wanted to attract more visitors to that side of the Strip, where 11 million pass by on an annual basis.
The decision to create the world’s largest observation wheel was a no-brainer, considering the success of such wheels in London, Singapore and elsewhere. The location was the only question, and when it was determined that the wheel would work best behind the existing hotels, a “link” to the Strip was needed and the “Linq” was born. To be built in an alleyway between the Imperial Palace and the Flamingo, the Linq was envisioned as an entertainment/shopping/dining center that would bring vitality and life to a previously dead area.
Meanwhile, the Imperial Palace was renovated and renamed the Quad, which was again changed to the Linq in October. The Flamingo was updated and renovated so that today, the shops and restaurants of the Linq serve the hotels on that side of the street. Also, the Cromwell replaced Bill’s Gamblin’ Hall, and is now viewed as a boutique hotel serving upper-end Caesars customers. The Cromwell also hosts Drai’s, the latest update of the original Las Vegas nightclub experience, on the roof of the property with a dramatic view of the Strip.
Jon Gray, the original general manager of the Linq, explains how this works:
“We were under-indexed in the Flamingo, the Quad (now the Linq hotel) and Cromwell in restaurants per room,” he says. “That was another reason we did the Linq. We were a great exporter to non-Caesars restaurants. But now with the Linq, it will satisfy that desire for more dining options.”
Entertainment was also a prime concern, and the addition of Brooklyn Bowl, a bowling alley/restaurant/bar, brings some top acts to the Linq. All of the shops, restaurants and hotels are joined together by Caesars’ state-of-the-art loyalty program.
“Total Rewards is totally integrated,” says Gray. “We’ve already been booking room packages with tickets to the High Roller and Brooklyn Bowl as part of the attraction. And this isn’t limited to Vegas. Our out-of-market properties are also fully invested in this effort. They’re very excited about using the wheel and the Linq to drive business to them.”
The Linq spans more than 300,000 square feet, and features more than 30 retail, dining, nightlife and entertainment venues (70 percent restaurants and bars, 30 percent retail and entertainment).
Architect of Record:
Design Architect: David Schwarz, David M. Schwarz Architects
Vortex Design Architect: Branislav Hetzel, Hetzel Design
Designer: The Hettema Group
General Contractor: W. A. Richardson Builders
Retail Advisor: Rick J. Caruso, Founder and CEO, Caruso Affiliated
Investment: $350 million