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European Jewel

Grand Casino Beograd
Belgrade, Serbia

DESIGN ARCHITECT: Árter, of Brussels, Belgium
PROJECT PARTNERS: Casinos Austria International (51 percent); Club Hotel Loutraki (39 percent); Serbia National Lottery (10 percent)
COST: US$124 million
TOTAL SQUARE METERS: Casino 5,500; total 9,000

Grand Casino Beograd is one of the most sophisticated properties to appear during Southeastern Europe’s ongoing casino boom. Situated on the banks of the river Danube, this new entertainment center in Belgrade, Serbia, provides guests with an impressive mix of modern gaming, fine dining, entertainment and conference facilities.

The casino offers 25 tables of American roulette, blackjack, Casino Stud Poker, Three Card Poker, Texas Hold’em Poker, and midi punto banco. Slot players will find over 220 state of the art machines linked to a Mystery Jackpot.

Inside the gaming area, the restaurant Diva offers a gourmet menu and wine list, while Ginger features Asian fusion cuisine. A third restaurant, Chameleon, located outside the gaming area and accessible from outside the casino as well, serves French and Italian cuisine.

A luxurious mix of leather, glass, marble and turned wood gives Grand Casino Beograd a contemporary yet glamorous ambience. The various gaming and relaxation areas flow elegantly one into the other. Adding a touch of history, the casino has been built inside the yet-to-be renovated Hotel Jugoslavija, which hosted international movie stars and world leaders during the Tito years in Yugoslavia. 

The Parada multi-function room can accommodate up to 250 people for receptions, press conferences, seminars and banquets. Finishing the offering is the high-end retail Vicky M shop, located right in the gaming area.

The casino began operations at the end of June 2007 and celebrated its grand opening in February 2008.

Miami in Vegas

Fontainebleau
Las Vegas

ARCHITECT: Bergman, Walls & Associates
COST: $2.9 billion
ROOMS: 3,889-room hotel with 2,719 standard rooms, 152 suites and 1,018 condo-hotel units
CASINO FLOOR: 100,000 square feet
MEETING SPACE: 390,000 square feet of indoor and outdoor conference space
RETAIL SPACE: 300,000 square feet
AMENITIES: 60,000-square-foot spa, 3,200-seat performing arts theater, 24 restaurants and lounges


Expected to open in late 2009, Fontainebleau Resort and Casino seems to be flying under the radar when it comes to coverage of projects on the Strip.

But the $2.9 billion resort will kick off a string of openings in Las Vegas that will change the look of the Strip and usher in a new era of upscale mixed-use resorts.

Fontainebleau will feature a 100,000-square-foot casino, a 63-story hotel tower with 3,889 rooms, almost 400,000 square feet of meeting space, 300,000 square feet of retail space and a 60,000-square-foot spa. It is being built on 24.5 acres that was once the home of the Algiers and El Rancho casinos.

As with the Eastside Cannery, James Packer’s Crown has an interest in Fontainebleau. The Australian gaming mogul spent $250 million in April 2007 to acquire nearly 20 percent of the developing company Fontainebleau

The Las Vegas opening should build off the expected success of the fall 2008 opening of a non-gaming Fontainebleau Resort in Miami, Florida.

Singapore Swings

Resorts World at Sentosa
Sentosa Island, Singapore

ARCHITECT: Michael Graves & Associates
COST: US$4.2 billion
TOTAL LAND AREA: 121 acres
ROOMS & UTILITIES: 1,800


When the Genting Group won the bid for the second Singapore casino, it was understood that the complex would be designed for a different audience than the first, Sands Marina, which will be built and operated by the Las Vegas Sands organization (owners of the Venetians in Las Vegas and Macau).

While Sands Marina will appeal to the business traveler, Resorts World on Sentosa Island-developed with partner Universal Studios-will be aimed at families. The first Universal Studios theme park outside the United States will play a large role in the resort along with Asia’s largest aquarium, Marine Life Park, and the Maritime Xperiential Museum dedicated to Asia’s maritime cultures.

Designed by legendary American architect Michael Graves, Resorts World will be an iconic tropical resort where landscape and architecture converge. Six hotels including the all-suite Maxims Residences, a Hard Rock

According to Lim Kok Thay, chairman of the Genting Group, Resorts World at Sentosa will be Singapore’s vision of a true tourist attraction, with an estimated 15 million people ready to visit in its first year of operation in 2010.

“We will create a world-leading family destination that will be uniquely successful, uniquely sustainable and uniquely Singapore,” says Lim.

Creating the Signature Restaurant

The stage is set. Hosts stand at attention to greet patrons coming from the bustling casino floor. Inside, couples relax in overstuffed chairs in quaint alcoves framed by fireplaces and trickling fountains. Candlelight and soft music set the mood; heavy menus adorned with gold braid foreshadow the price point.

An attentive wait staff caters to their every need. It is a quality experience from the moment they arrive until the time they leave.

Welcome to today’s signature casino restaurant. It’s a far cry from the $7.77 Gambler’s Special, a steak dinner once offered 24 hours a day in casino coffee shops. These days, the casino customer is more sophisticated, educated by the Food Network, with an increasing awareness of fine dining and the snob appeal of celebrity chefs.

“Things have really changed in the gaming circles,” says Corey Nyman, director of operations for Nyman Group restaurant consultants. “People are willing to pay for fine dining; it doesn’t always have to be ‘comped.’ So casinos have to decide whether their restaurants are going to be amenities to the high rollers or a money-making venture.”

“The high-end casino restaurant used to be a loss leader,” adds Richard Dobransky, vice president of food and beverage for Delaware North, a 95-year old company that has worked with restaurants in a variety of settings, from casinos to stadiums. “Since they catered to high rollers, they would just give the meal away. But that’s not the case anymore.”

More and more, casinos are opting for the moneymakers, putting in a signature restaurant, or two or three. But what really goes into such a venture, and how do you ensure its success? Below, industry experts sound off about the challenges and rewards of creating today’s signature casino restaurant.


Pre-Concept   
Before you make a single decision, much less bring in a brand name chef, do your homework.

“We come in and do qualitative research,” says Michael Soll, executive vice president of the Innovation Group.  “We do focus groups with current and future customers, we do telephone and Internet surveys. We find out what people want and how excited they are about it. Then we can make recommendations and extrapolate the kind of revenue that could be generated.”

“We do a lot of analysis,” says Nyman. “We look at the property’s strengths, weakness, demographics, food and labor costs and restaurant competition in the area. We meet with key people at the property, from management down to the casino host and the people responsible for player development.

“We want to understand who their customer is so we can make recommendations for the type of restaurant. If management wants a Mexican cantina but the market is demanding a steakhouse, they need to know that.”

The Nyman Group did all the restaurants at Trump Taj Mahal in Atlantic City. Not only did they analyze the opportunities on property, they also assessed the draw to the local market by non-gamers.

“To some extent, locals are going to drive your business,” says Nyman. “You have to look at the barriers to entry. How difficult is it for them to get to the restaurant? How far is parking? Is there a valet? Do they have to walk through a smoke-filled casino in order to get there? We take all of these issues into account.”

Ultimately, the consensus is that casinos must be sure that a signature restaurant appeals to players and locals alike. But that’s not all. It has to be different from any other restaurant at the property, and ideally at competing properties too.

One way to create that exclusivity is to bring in a celebrity chef or other innovative concept.

 

Star Chef or In-house Talent?
Bobby Flay Steak, Wolfgang Puck American Grille and Emeril’s New Orleans are all examples of successful celebrity restaurant concepts. The match between celebrity chefs and casinos, however, is relatively new.

“We were the first celebrity chef in a casino,” says Tom Kaplan, senior managing partner of the Wolfgang Puck Fine Dining Group. “When we were approached about opening in Vegas, they said it would ruin our reputation. But it’s done just the opposite.”

“For us, the decision to open a Wolfgang Puck restaurant really starts with who the partner is,” Kaplan says. “We look for the right partner, then the right location. It’s not just about putting our name on the door. We’re not interested in just collecting a management fee. We are present.”

Puck himself makes personal appearances nightly in Los Angeles, where he lives, and visits his other locations faithfully.

“Usually at the beginning, you have to decide whether your property needs a celebrity chef for exposure,” says Paul Heretakis of Westar Architects, a firm that has worked with celebrities like Paula Deen and Mario Batali. “Remember that the celebrity chef will drive both the décor and the food.”

They also take some of the profits, according to industry experts. Michael Soll of the Innovation Group says a casino in-house restaurant offers more control, but there are benefits to bringing in a name as well.

“Do you want to create something in-house and forge a signature profile or do something out of house?” he asks. “Then you have to decide if you’re going to lease the space or work with a management group or the restaurateur. It sometimes depends on who’s putting up the capital. Celebrity chefs are supplying less and less capital, but they’re getting the kind of media attention that sometimes in-house restaurants do not.”

One reason to bring in a celebrity is to reach the client you don’t have, says Heretakis. “When we opened Mia at Caesars in Atlantic City, it was a great marriage for the property and for Chris Scarduzio and Georges Perrier. Their core customers in Philly already knew the brand, and it’s close enough that they’d drive an hour to a new destination to try that new restaurant.”

“Everybody seems to want a celebrity chef,” says Corey Nyman. “Personally, we’re indifferent. Is the celebrity chef going to make the most money? Or do we want to save that money, which could be 15 percent to 30 percent? You might get the initial flash with the press, but is it going to be sustained?”

Heretakis adds, “Of course, if you don’t have a star to bring in customers, you need to come up with a great concept.”


Designing the Space
Once the concept is created, the next step is design.

“Sometimes the property has it nailed down, and sometimes it changes,” says Bryan Hamlin, vice president of design for the WorthGroup. “There’s a lot of fluidity. Our job is to realize the vision of the restaurant.”

And just as patrons’ expectations of fine dining have risen, so has the pressure to create a signature design.

“Design is so mainstream these days,” Hamlin says. “Because of the media, design concepts have become much more accessible to the public. So the level of design has been elevated to a much higher standard.”

To some extent, space dictates design as well.

“If the location is on the water, near the casino floor, in a larger or smaller space, all of those elements affect the design,” says Floss Barber of Floss Barber, Inc. “With most upscale restaurants, however, there are design elements that are constant. For example, we ‘announce’ that it’s upscale with an entrance that feels exclusive. Even the entry itself is an experience.” 

“You don’t want it to be crowded in this type of restaurant,” says Barber. “The choice of materials will be more refined. The lighting might be concealed or if not, we might use signature lighting pieces.”

Designers “choreograph” the path that patrons will take.

“There is a sequence of arrival,” says Hamlin. “This gives us an opportunity for installation of artwork, views to the outside. There’s a movement to introduce natural lighting in perimeter places, moveable partitions, outside dining where possible to open up the space.

“You want to build the level of ambiance, sophistication and privacy, so the acoustics are very important. You want to be able to have a conversation.”

Designers may also get involved in more than the physical space. They often make recommendations on server’s uniforms, menus, and even nametags.

“Black and white is a classic look for a server,” says Nyman. “But if you have an upscale steakhouse with a bold theme, you can go for open collars and a more vibrant feel. Functionality is key. They have to be able to move and work in their uniforms.”

Nyman doesn’t believe in nametags. “Most guests don’t take the time to look at them,” he says. “I’d rather that they introduce themselves as part of their script.”

Of course, design is another area where a celebrity chef often gets involved.

“In the case of Mario Batali, the design of the room was secondary to the simplicity of the food,” says Heretakis. “In other restaurants, you’ll see that the rooms are as much of a ‘star’ as the chef is.'”


The Menu

The menu is a natural result of the concept, whether it’s signature in-house or celebrity chef.

The important point to remember is that the menu caters to the customer. That’s why Bobby Flay’s Mesa Grill at Caesars Palace offers a Caesar salad and strip steak.  

“Yes, it’s a Southwestern concept,” says Nyman, “but it’s still approachable. So we include menu items that we know will sell.”

Wolfgang Puck has created five distinctly different brands with different menus to address a range of customers, from the upscale Spago to the more playful American Grille. In all, Puck has 14 restaurants, each with an executive chef who’s worked with Wolfgang for many years.

“Our menus may vary in each location, as our décor does,” says Kaplan. “Our chefs are very talented in their own right and Wolfgang encourages creativity and exploration, within the concept of course. We also work with the local growers and producers in the region. We might do certain dishes in Maui with a focus on fish, while in Beaver Creek we’d focus on game. Then of course, if someone wants a dish cooked specially, we’ll accommodate them.”


The Next Big Thing
“Everyone’s looking for the next big trend,” says Soll. “Who’s the next big chef? What’s the next great concept?”

“I’d say the classic steakhouse has about five years left,” says Dobransky of Delaware North. “It has been the hottest thing in recent years, but now we’re also seeing a trend toward more specialty restaurants, like Asian fusion.”

“It’s important to stay ahead of the trends,” Nyman agrees. “You can’t come in the middle. You have to watch what’s going locally, statewide, nationally and even worldwide. It’s not enough to stay inside the bubble of the restaurant community.”

One thing is certain. With the increased emphasis on fine dining, and increasing discernment among casino patrons, it will just keep getting better and better. Bon appetit.

Designing the Small Casino

In today’s competitive casino environment, every owner is tasked to provide guests with a more dynamic, distinctive experience. This is particularly true when the time comes to renovate or expand a facility.

In these situations, the most important standard is to develop an innovative and quality product that fulfills patron expectations and market demand. And for those whose “box” is smaller than the neighbors’, there’s the added pressure to maximize every inch of the limited square footage available.

The answer lies in solutions that are guest-centric, operating parameters that are sound and deliberate, and homework completed up front. To make sure you are prioritizing the right concerns from the outset of your project, considerthe following recommendations.

Think Casino Design 101.
Complete a general assessment of the existing scope, design and layout of your facility. What works? Is the floor plan convenient and accessible? Are signage and way-finding logical throughout? Are primary functions and signature features well profiled internally and easy to find? Do you have the right mix of F&B offerings? Is parking convenient, and how does it compare to the competition?

If the answer to any of these questions falls short of expectations, put the consequential improvements at the top of your to-do list.

While taking inventory is helpful for any gaming property, it can certainly be argued that these points weigh more heavily at smaller facilities with fewer amenities and less square footage to capture attention and make a lasting impression.

One of the greatest potential advantages for a small casino is the opportunity to provide a more intimate guest experience. The key is to be perceived as comfortable, convenient and easily navigated. When “small” becomes equated with overcrowding or stagnant offerings, this is the tipping point for owners to invest in significant improvements. Keep it interesting, dynamic and flexible, and your guests will come back for more.
   

Think Current, and Think Bottom Line.
Translated, this means that owners and their design and construction teams must work to avoid outdated patterns from the casinos of yesteryear. The most efficient and effective small casinos orient their programs and floor plans toward today’s technology and market trends, and prioritize spaces that generate revenue and provide for multiple uses.

Let’s talk money, for example. Cage areas are a critical component of any gaming floor, and innovations such as ticket in/ticket out (TITO) technologies are evolving cage-related requirements (the trend is toward improved program efficiencies). Modern casinos implementing such tools as magnetic strip cards and cash redemption kiosks simultaneously improve guest access and responsiveness; they also benefit from reduced area, labor and access demands. The end result is freed-up space that can be utilized for improved customer service functions and revenue generators. Cage, count, security and related back of house areas are still required, but the overall square footage dedicated for these spaces can be downsized and repurposed for such other operational considerations. The owner, management team and guest all benefit-as does the bottom line.

A corollary to the TITO system is a progression of the reward redemption center. To accommodate the growing number of players who prefer automated feedback over merchandise from bonus points, the same TITO system utilized for cash redemption can also streamline tracking and rewards. The server automatically monitors and credits play, inherently reducing a portion of the space requirements for the rewards counter, showroom and related back of house areas. As with the cash cage, the rewards headquarters is still a must, but the overall square footage commitment is condensed.


Think ‘Round The Clock.
This is a must for operators reinventing their small space. Consider how the parts of the whole work together, particularly for those with 24/7 operations. Managers need to think about their existing (and potentially expanded or renovated) casino property in terms of both floor and time segments to create opportunities that take advantage of downtime in various spaces.

The most successful small casino managers strategize different ways to use the same space for a variety of functions through the day and night, as well as to rotate centers of activity and interest throughout the property.

There is no better way to generate these ideas than to get out on the floor and talk to your guests. Listen to their feedback and work with your internal creative and design and construction teams to explore opportunities for cross-implementation. Be open-minded and resourceful. The smaller the “box,” the more imaginative your team will need to be.

Inherently, F&B and entertainment venues that are not constantly utilized offer some of the greatest potential for multi-functioning. Imagine a one hundred seat venue that serves as the morning coffee shop for sit-down, continental or grab-and-go breakfast alternatives. Throughout the day, the same space can transition to a more traditional buffet for lunch, then to a sports bar in late afternoon (close the drapes, turn on the TV screens, and change over a few menu items). Finally, via a portable stage for karaoke or local music, the same space turns into a late night entertainment hub.

One space. Four functions. All using the same core infrastructure. Obviously, these operational considerations must be planned well in advance of a renovation or expansion, but if done effectively, the same space can be accessed multiple times throughout an eight- to 10- hour day, providing a variety of options well beyond what a guest would expect to find in a small casino. Limited space-big ongoing return.

On a larger scale, the same concept plays out in a multi-purpose flex space that provides such alternatives as bingo, conventions and meetings, receptions and entertainment. Owners should also consider such areas for temporary housing of gaming components if a renovation or expansion directly impacts the casino floor. It is a productive and necessary way to provide for unavoidable gaming improvements while maintaining operations and minimizing impact to the bottom line.


Think Like Marketing.
Throughout a planned expansion or renovation, always consider the response of your guest. From the outset, verify that your project is appropriate to market demand and guest expectations. Once the intent is solidified, work throughout the process of design and construction to make sure you keep your patrons informed about how your plans will improve their long-term experience.

It’s possible to maintain or even increase revenues during an expansion or renovation project at a small casino. We’ve seen it best achieved by owner and management teams who embraced the idea that an improvement project is one of the largest and highest profile marketing opportunities a property will ever have, and opted to invest in communication, promotions and media accordingly.


Think Right Now.
It goes without saying that the most cost-effective way to increase your revenue is to operate what you already have more effectively. Significant construction can bring long-term return on investment, but you should also implement minor operational improvements that provide immediate impact.

If your F&B operations are always in the red, even with a little assistance on paper from the marketing budget, re-working the dining room and tearing down and replacing the kitchen is not always the best answer. Look first at your operations. What can you do about cost of goods? When was the last time you shopped vendors? Is your menu tailored to the goods available to you locally? Would something as simple as a larger walk-in cooler help you purchase larger volumes and obtain better pricing?

There are always cheap fixes that minor renovations and improvements can support.Explore all of your options and plan wisely.

A properly operated small facility can return at a higher rate than a poorly operated larger one. It isn’t just the size of the box. It’s also what you put in it, how you shape it, and how you make sure it can hold a lot of different things at different times. Don’t fill it with excess “packing.” Rather, be flexible and provide the goods and services that are current and desirable for your best clients.

And of course, remember to communicate these goals with your internal team and design and construction professionals so they understand the priorities and intentions for your small space.

Together, you can incorporate the right program, provide flexible operational alternatives, and exceed the expectations of your guests.

A Work in Progress

Creativity and innovation cannot be limited by a clock, although the failure to adhere to a schedule is often more costly than valuable. At Encore, there were several last-minute changes that radically altered what Wynn Resorts’ Encore Las Vegas would become.

From the groundbreaking, where Steve Wynn described a property that was quite unlike the finished product, through the early stages of construction and even upon entering the homestretch, there were changes at Encore that finely tuned its appeal to customers and its final form.

Encore was dramatically impacted by the company’s first resort outside the United States, Wynn Macau. The designs for the rooms and the two-story suites influenced Steve Wynn and company executives so much that they implemented changes in design as the building was under construction.

According to chief architect DeRuyter Butler, the revelation about the two-story suites was implemented in such a manner that it did not impact the construction schedule; the drawings, permits and layout would be completed in time to start the concrete pours on the 21st floor. And the transformation from modestly larger rooms (compared to Wynn Las Vegas) into mini-suites was just as dramatic and timely.

Roger Thomas, the company’s chief designer, describes last-minute changes in the restaurants Society and Sinatra that complied with the requests of the chefs/operators who were only chosen as the property was nearing completion.

The changes overall make Encore one of the most intimate large hotels in the business, able to impress the VIPs and the common man alike.

But the changes were dramatic and risky, proving two old adages: Where there’s a will, there’s a way; and look before you leap.

Engineering Innovation

Founding principals Jon Sparer and Tom Wucherer established Las Vegas-based architecture firm YWS in 2001. Over the years, they have built the company into a leading design and architectural firm focused on the serious business of leisure, including hospitality, gaming and dining.

YWS has extensive experience designing casinos, hotels and resorts, restaurants, nightclubs, lounges and entertainment venues across North America and around the globe. The firm’s design expertise has been called upon for world-class, trend-setting integrated resorts such as Bellagio, Mirage and Treasure Island in Las Vegas; Borgata in Atlantic City; and MGM Grand in Macau.

From its 10,000-square-foot design studio just minutes from the famous Las Vegas Strip, the team at YWS includes many multi-state licensed architects among its staff of 35.

Drawing from years of experience on a wide variety of projects of varying scope, YWS has developed a sophisticated response to market demands, land utilization, operational efficiency and construction costs. Past projects prove that good design can improve a client’s bottom line. In addition to paying close attention to the visual details, the firm is intensely focused on how a building performs functionally, and brings to any project special knowledge of sustainability and energy efficiency. Aside from superior design sensibilities and technical knowledge, YWS understands the importance of treating its clients as assets and makes client satisfaction a priority.

The team at YWS has a simple goal: to approach each project with passion and enthusiasm, deliver the highest level of service and provide a finished product that is creatively designed, architecturally distinctive and financially successful.

YWS services include master planning, concept innovation, design development, architecture, programming and scheduling.

For more information, visit www.ywsarchitects.com.

Exciting Expansion

WESTAR Architects is a Las Vegas-based hospitality design firm that has grown to become one of the largest companies of its kind in the 12 years since its inception. Founders Paul Heretakis and Patrick Klenk have worked diligently to design and develop some of the most successful hospitality projects in the world. With offices in Las Vegas, Phoenix, Philadelphia and Macau, WESTAR Architects is quickly becoming a truly global brand.

The Las Vegas office caters to the needs of clients in the world-class Nevada gaming industry, while the Philadelphia office focuses on East Coast and regional clients. The Phoenix branch develops casinos for Native American tribes, and WESTAR’s Macau affiliate is focused on the booming Chinese market. This expansion from Las Vegas outward has helped WESTAR Architects to become a diverse, award-winning company that is able to employ specialists in master planning, architecture, interior design, branding and restaurant development.

Heretakis alone has more than 15 years of experience working on hospitality projects nationwide. With his oversight, WESTAR Architects has completed more than 400 hospitality projects, included hundreds of bars and restaurants and more than 3,000 hotel rooms. As a graduate of New York’s Pratt Institute, Heretakis has both academic and real-world experience designing hospitality projects. He was named one of Global Gaming Business magazine’s 25 people to watch in 2009.

When working with clients, WESTAR Architects operates according to three principles: passion, creativity and service. Driven by passion, the architects at WESTAR apply their expertise to every space within a resort, including casino floors, rooms and suites, theaters and convention centers, retail areas, spas, bars, lounges, restaurants and nightclubs.

The firm’s use of a client-driven vision studio, innovation laboratory studio, operational branding and service studio, alternate revenue-generating studio and a restaurant development studio help to implement the creative vision that develops from a partnership between a client and a designer.

According to WESTAR Architects, the foundation of service is what truly drives success. The company believes that by providing consistently exceptional work, long-term relationships with clients and their properties are built and nurtured. WESTAR has worked with some of the biggest names in gaming, including the MGM Mirage Corporation, Las Vegas Sands, Harrah’s Entertainment, Trump Entertainment and Resorts International.

For WESTAR, the key to longevity and success is developing quality products and incorporating the client’s ideas and vision into the project. From the recent remodeling of the New York-New York Hotel and Casino to expansions in Asia, WESTAR Architects continues to display its creativity and show its dedication to developing some of the finest hospitality projects the world has ever seen.

For more information, visit www.wagnarchitects.com.

Long-Term Luxury

Thalden-Boyd-Emery Architects comprises a group of experienced designers who have perfected their skills. Principals Barry Thalden and Chief Boyd founded the company in 1971, and Richard Emery joined the team in 1982 to contribute to Thalden-Boyd-Emery’s rapidly expanding casino design business.

The firm has grown from its small beginnings to one of the top 10 design firms in the hospitality industry, according to Hotel & Motel Management magazine. With Boyd’s Native American expertise (having begun his career designing spaces for tribal buildings) and the principals’ focus on longevity, Thalden-Boyd-Emery is now a go-to firm for diverse architectural experience.

The firm offers services such as architecture, engineering, interior design, theming and master planning to some of the world’s largest gaming operators. High-profile past projects include the Venetian Resort Hotel Casino in Las Vegas; Buffalo Thunder Resort and Casino in Santa Fe, New Mexico; Morongo Casino Resort and Spa in Palm Springs, California; and many more. 

Bars, restaurants, hotel rooms, pools, spas, convention centers and meeting rooms-nothing is off limits for Thalden-Boyd-Emery Architects’ team of designers.

The firm also has a long history of excellent client service, which is key to the three principals’ vision: to provide experience, creativity and integrity to each project. Thirty-eight years of success prove Thalden-Boyd-Emery Architects is heading in the right direction.

For more information, visit www.thalden.com.

Supplying Demand

Purchasing Management International is one of the largest volume hospitality procurement agents that supplies furniture fixtures and equipment to the hospitality and gaming industries.

Founded in 1993, PMI has globally sourced, purchased and installed more than $1.5 billion in casino, resort and hotel furnishings, operating equipment, systems and construction materials worldwide. PMI’s mission is focused on providing unparalleled purchasing services while continuing to expand its global reach in order to remain the leader in procurement and sourcing. 

Headquartered in Dallas, PMI employs 60 purchasing specialists at four worldwide office locations in Las Vegas, Cancun and New Delhi, India. These offices provide a global network, ensuring seamless acquisition, project coordination and job cost control.

The company provides services ranging from worldwide sourcing to conceptual budgets, as-specified budgets, flat fee negotiation, purchasing timelines, cash flow projections, bid spreadsheets, expediting reports, job cost reports, on-site supervision, video conferencing and logistics, installation and warehouse coordination.

In Las Vegas, PMI recently completed the renovation of 2,753 rooms and corridors at Treasure Island; the renovation of 2,738 guestrooms and 200 penthouse suites at the Mirage; and theluxury resort Red Rock Casino.

In Atlantic City, PMI projects include the three phases of the Borgata Hotel Casino: the new casino, more than 2,000 guestrooms, a 300,000-square-foot expansion of gaming areas, spa and luxury suites, an expansion of 880 new rooms and the lifestyle center, the Water Club.

PMI is the leading procurement agent for Native American gaming. The company has recently sourced, purchased and installed FF&E and OS&E for the Gila River Indiana Community’s Wild Horse Pass Hotel and Casino and the Lone Butte Casino’ the Poarch Band of Creek Indians’ Wind Creek Casino’ and Harrah’s Cherokee Hotel and Casino.

PMI is on the forefront of green business practices in the hospitality and casino resort industries. President Bill Langmade is a Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design LEED-Accredited Professional. PMI assists clients in compliance with the LEED Green Building Rating System, the nationally accepted benchmark for design, construction and operation of high-performance green buildings.

PMI is currently involved in purchasing management services for projects in North America, Latin America, Asia, the Caribbean and the Middle East.

For more information, visit www.pmiconnect.com.

Iconic Imagination

Perini Building Company is the largest builder of hospitality and gaming resorts in the nation. Its niche market is constructing fast-track, complex projects. Professional services offered are construction management, general contracting, pre-construction, post-construction and design/build. Perini Building Company is a wholly owned subsidiary of Tutor Perini Corporation and trades on the New York Stock Exchange.

The company is currently building CityCenter, the largest privately funded construction project in the U.S. The total cost of CityCenter is more than $9 billion. Also under construction in Las Vegas are the Cosmopolitan Resort & Casino and Terminal 3 at McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas.

Recently completed projects include Trump International Hotel & Tower in Las Vegas, Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center in Maryland, Sheraton Phoenix Downtown Hotel in Arizona, and MGM Grand at Foxwoods in Connecticut.

Over the past 25 years, Perini has built some of the most recognizable resort and gaming properties in the country, including Paris Las Vegas, Caesars Palace, the Colosseum at Caesars, Luxor Las Vegas, the Mohegan Sun expansion, Palms Casino Resort, Red Rock Casino, Resort and Spa and the Ritz-Carlton Lake Las Vegas.

In addition to Perini’s construction expertise, attributes that have led to the company’s success are based on Perini’s philosophy of building relationships on trust. The company derives more than 80 percent of its business from repeat clients. As a leader in the construction industry, Perini is also at the forefront of implementing diversity initiatives to help foster economic opportunities for minority, women and disadvantaged-owned businesses on its projects.

Other notable achievements include Forbes magazine’s selection of Perini Corporation as one of the 26 best-managed companies in America.

For more information, visit www.perini.com.

Big A: One big deal for gaming operators

With the coveted Aqueduct franchise again up for grabs, no less than six suitors are standing in line for the chance to build and operate Big A gaming.

With 4,500 proposed video lottery terminals, the racino would be “more arcade than Atlantic City,” smirked the New York Times in 2008, but, like similar projects around the U.S. and beyond, it was expected to prop up Aqueduct’s declining racing business, provide thousands of jobs, and pump millions in revenue into the state, which is running on empty with a $14 billion-plus budget deficit.

Delaware North’s initial plan for the racino included a contemporary, $250 million slot parlor, sprawling across the 192-acre site in Ozone Park, with 330,000 square feet of gaming space to abut the existing grandstand and clubhouse (which were built in 1894, and rebuilt during the 1950s).

The exterior was to be sleek and fairly unadorned-a complement to the existing track facilities, which reflect the no-frills sensibilities of mid-20th-century architect Arthur Froelich (Froelich also designed many supermarkets of the period). Inside, it would be pure Viva Las Vegas (minus the dealers): a cacophony of glitz and glamour, with all the color and buzz of a Leroy Neiman dream.

An Aqueduct operator has not yet been named, but the racino formula is certainly working elsewhere in the U.S. Though casino revenues overall are down, year-over-year numbers at domestic racinos grew more than 17 percent to $6.19 billion last year, according to the American Gaming Association.

Living Design

Established in 1958 and based in Newport Beach, California, Lifescapes International, Inc. is a leading landscape architectural design firm. With more than 15 casino resorts on the Las Vegas Strip alone, Lifescapes International is well known for creating successful, dynamic “destinations” throughout the United States and overseas. For more than three decades, the firm has been a significant design influence in gaming-related properties.

The firm recently completed the Las Vegas Strip’s newest casino resort addition with the opening of Wynn Resorts’ Encore Las Vegas. The Lifescapes International team also looks forward to the completion of the Fontainebleau Resort and Casino, located in Las Vegas and due to open the end of 2009, as well as their River City project in St. Louis, Missouri for Pinnacle Entertainment.

Lifescapes International’s senior leadership team consists of CEO/FASLA Don Brinkerhoff, President/CFO Julie Brinkerhoff-Jacobs, Executive Vice President Daniel Trust, Director of Field Services Roger Voettiner and Director of Design Andrew Kreft. They work in unison to create and manage the firm’s projects. A team of highly qualified landscape architects, project designers and a strong administrative staff ably assists them.

“We have been entrusted by our clientele to assist them in creating successful projects, and are fortunate to be able to continue creating domestic as well as international destination casinos, resorts, retail centers and mixed use projects,” explains CEO Don Brinkerhoff. “As a must-see city, Las Vegas is visited by millions of people annually, and many of our domestic and international clients have seen our Las Vegas work and have entrusted us to create projects in their communities-many of which are not casinos, but rather are places where garden settings of high quality make sense for their developments.”

In addition to working successfully on many national gaming developments, the firm has worked on a variety of Native American assignments. These include Agua Caliente Casino, Trump 29, Harrah’s Rincon Casino and Hotel, Barona Casino, Pala Casino and Resort and the Spa Casino and Resort.

“The entertainment and resort operators, including astute executives within the gaming industry, have realized for many years that stand-alone gaming activities are simply not enough to keep customers fully engaged on their properties,” Brinkerhoff-Jacobs says. “We are now working on nightclubs, European beach clubs, retail and restaurant environments so our gaming clients have other captivating activities for their customers to enjoy during their stay.”

For more information, visit www.lifescapesintl.com.

Constructing Community

The mention of art typically brings to mind images of sophisticated galleries and museums. But with KHS&S Contractors, art is created at the most unlikely of places-construction job sites across the United States.

As one of the nation’s largest interior/exterior specialty contractors and the country’s leading theme contractor, KHS&S turns to its in-house artists and craftsmen to fulfill developers’ visions for large-scale projects, from casinos to resorts to high-end retail and lifestyle centers.

Using paints to replicate everything from wood to marble to upholstery, and plasters to reproduce wood, bricks, rock and aged surfaces, KHS&S craftsmen have amassed a portfolio of projects that are a virtual showcase of building creativity and originality.

Through a water feature and rockwork group, KHS&S even continues the artistry outside-or brings the outdoors in-by integrating artificial and authentic rock formations with synchronized fountains, water walls or perimeter landscaping.

What’s more, since 1984, KHS&S has combined this creativity with the experience and knowledge of traditional wall and ceiling construction, offering a one-stop shop that can provide nearly every aspect of a project, from structural to ornamental elements.

For most projects, KHS&S in-house design-assist teams collaborate with architects and designers who want to make a statement with their projects. They use challenging designs and unique features and finishes. KHS&S staff takes these architectural concepts to finished construction drawings, providing assistance in material selection, value engineering and “constructability” along the way.

The company is evolving from a construction firm to a conglomerate of companies that serve the construction and architectural industries. KHS&S is able to serve owners, architects and general contractors in various capacities. The company is using technology to diversify its offerings, and will continue to apply various technological advances to projects to stay in sync with how the industry progresses in the next decade.

KHS&S operates 10 domestic offices in California, Florida, Nevada, Washington, Texas and New Jersey. It is also expanded into offices in Dubai, Bangkok, Singapore and Hong Kong. New projects include Aliante Station and CityCenter, both in Las Vegas.

For more information, visit www.khss.com.

Designing Distinctive Destinations

For more than 30 years since its founding in 1979, Hnedak Bobo Group (HBG) has provided architectural excellence to the gaming and entertainment industry. Publications such as Engineering News Record, Hotel Business and Hospitality Construction rank Hnedak Bobo Group as a top-10 leader in the U.S. hospitality design industry.  

The firm’s collaborative culture and progressive designs have attracted the attention of leading industry organizations and publications-landing HBG as one of the nation’s “Best Architecture Firms to Work For,” as ranked by Building Design and Construction magazine and Zweig White.  

The 100-person architecture, interior design and development management firm focuses its passion for entertainment design on propelling their clients’ success in the gaming and hospitality markets. Understanding how design and planning influences their clients’ successful business operations is the cornerstone of HBG’s philosophy, and is key to its own success. That understanding comes from delivering more than $3 billion in destination gaming and resort projects nationwide, and also as developers and owners of hospitality real estate.  

Walking in the owner’s shoes as developers of the $40 million Westin Memphis Beale Street Hotel affords HBG the opportunity to experience design from a rare perspective, fostering a deeper understanding of the balance between operational efficiency, financial performance and design aesthetics. The firm is focused on translating its experience into practical solutions for its clients.

HBG has cemented its reputation as designers of distinctive entertainment and gaming resort destinations. In the past 10 years alone, the firm has led the design of more than 15,000 hotel rooms encompassing 10 million square feet of resort, gaming and convention space.

The firm has progressively grown its core hospitality business to include a focused specialty in Indian gaming. Today, HBG is one of the largest providers of professional services in Indian Country, with client relationships representing 25 tribal business enterprises across the country. A recent acquisition has also expanded the firm’s markets to include mass-attendance attractions, large-scale arenas and family entertainment experiences.

In 2009, HBG will celebrate four of its major gaming projects entering the market with the completion of Wind Creek Casino and Hotel in Atmore, Alabama; Greektown Casino and Hotel in Detroit; the Oaklawn Jockey Club gaming expansion in Hot Springs, Arkansas; and the Northern Quest Casino expansion in Airway Heights (Spokane), Washington. HBG looks forward to continuing to offer the best in design and operational sensibility to its roster of esteemed, visionary clients.

For more information, visit www.hbginc.com.

Going Strong

Dougall Design is celebrating 21 years of business this year: Principal Terry Dougall founded his namesake company, Dougall Design Associates, Inc., in 1988. A casino interior design industry veteran of 36 years, he quickly grew the company’s reputation and raised its profile. In 1990, just two years after opening, he was already working on major projects-among them, the Forum Shops at Caesars Palace.

During the mid-1990s, the company experienced an explosion of growth. Dougall was commissioned to create the interiors for three Sam’s Town casinos in 1994. By 1996, he themed the Monte Carlo Resort & Casino on the Las Vegas Strip, followed shortly thereafter with a third interior renovation and expansion of the Forum Shops at Caesars Palace and the theming and renovation of the MGM Grand.

In 1997, the company was selected to design the interiors of the next two major projects in casino interior design: The Venetian and Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino-work ranging from $800 million to $1.3 billion.

Those two projects established Dougall as a top player in the casino design arena, a status that continues to this day. In addition to completing highly successful projects like the acclaimed Borgata in Atlantic City and THEhotel at Mandalay Bay, Dougall Design was selected to provide interiors for Boyd Gaming’s $4 billion Echelon Place (though the project is currently on hiatus).

For more information, visit www.dougalldesign.com.

Architectural Excellence

Cuningham Group transcends tradition with architecture, interior design, urban design and planning services for a diverse mix of client and project types, including a significant focus on gaming, casino and entertainment destinations.

“The future of casino resorts lies in the design of ‘experience architecture’ and the use of architectural story-telling to create unique environments,” says Tom Hoskens, AIA, principal of Cuningham Group. “As is the Vegas of today, the resorts of the new millennium will be multi-dimensional experiences, where each guest becomes part of the action.”

Cuningham Group’s client-centered, collaborative approach incorporates trend-setting architecture and environmental responsiveness to create projects that weave seamlessly into the urban fabric. While design excellence through collaboration is always its goal, the development of green solutions for their clients and our planet is also a priority. The firm believes each project should be designed for the betterment of the community and society as a whole, and sustainability and green design seem to be a natural extension of its core ideologies.

Throughout its 18-year history of designing gaming and resort destinations, Cuningham Group’s stature in the industry continues to grow. Their success in designing creative and profitable gaming resort environments has led to multiple gaming industry awards and repeat work from clients.

Recent project openings include the new hotel and convention center at the Isleta Casino & Resort in New Mexico, the Creek Nation Casino in Oklahoma and the Red Hawk Casino in California.

Cuningham Group’s portfolio of completed projects represents a full array of casinos, hotels, theaters, convention centers, restaurants, retail venues, parking structures and support facilities that comprise gaming and resort destinations. Included are the Harrah’s Cherokee Great Smoky Mountain Casino Resort, Soaring Eagle Casino Resort, Palace Casino Resort and seven casino resorts for Grand Casinos/Lakes Entertainment, just to name a few.

The extensive experience of the firm’s professionals allows them to offer clients the professional design expertise essential for creating environments that attract guests, increase profitability and encourage repeat visits.

Founded in 1968, the firm is consistently recognized as a leader in the field of architecture, and has grown to more than 200 employees, with offices in Minneapolis, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Biloxi, Bakersfield, Madrid and Seoul.

Cuningham Group’s gaming, hospitality and entertainment projects can be found in Europe, Asia and throughout the United States, including projects in California, Nevada, Oklahoma, New Mexico, North Carolina, Mississippi, Minnesota and Michigan.

For more information about Cuningham Group, visit www.cuningham.com.

Interesting Interiors

A combined 30 years of design experience between the two Cleo Design principals, Ann Fleming and Ken Kulas, defines the maturity of the firm’s flexibility without compromising the project-be it resort hotels and casinos, entertainment complexes, commercial and office spaces or luxury residences.

The firm’s mission is simple: to underscore a high level of creativity with exceptional attention to function, client needs and individual tastes. Creating a space that reflects a sense of place is the ultimate goal of Cleo Design.

Their clients provide Cleo Design with an essential portal for discovery and interpretation of enduring design. Most important to the firm is how clients envision their respective projects. Choice, flexibility and tenacity are the underlying concepts that define the Cleo perspective toward all projects. Every aspect of a Cleo project is skillfully executed, ensuring that the client’s expectations are met and exceeded.

The team at Cleo Design is a seasoned group with a history of collaborating with one another in innumerable projects. Yet, each member works as an individual, bringing varied concepts and perspectives to the same project. The team’s striking capabilities reflect in Cleo’s highly diverse projects from coast to coast, in venues including casino and resort interiors, related public areas, bars and lounges, restaurants and retail locations.

The award-winning firm was founded in 2000, and Fleming and Kulas have overseen some of the biggest gaming design projects conceptualized this decade. From Blue Chip Casino in Michigan City, Indiana to the firm’s current work on the Cirque du Soleil Theater under construction at MGM Mirage’s CityCenter project in Las Vegas, Cleo Design has consistently tackled the most cutting-edge spaces and given them life.

For more information, visit www.cleo-design.com.

One of a Kind

Cagley & Tanner is an interior design firm headquartered in Las Vegas specializing in resort and gaming design, as well as select residential design. Working in collaboration with many of the best architects in the world, Cagley & Tanner has been responsible for some of the most famous public spaces in the world. The firm was were responsible for the new look of the Flamingo Las Vegas “Go” rooms and suites, which have won several awards from Hospitality Design and NEWH, as well as being the only gaming resort listed in Travel and Leisure’s 2009 book of the “World’s Greatest Hotels, Resorts and Spas.”

All of the interiors for the wildly successful new Wind Creek Casino & Hotel in Atmore, Alabama were completely designed by Cagley & Tanner, from the casino itself and all the restaurants and nightclubs to the guest rooms, suites and villas. The firm’s projects have included the new High Limit Salon Privé at Bellagio, the Red Rooms and suites for Paris Las Vegas, a series of contemporary guest rooms and suites at the Rio, the new Cathouse Nightclub at Luxor and a vast new nightclub at CityCenter.

Ongoing design work includes the Villas at Bellagio, the Villas at the Mirage and a wide variety of public spaces for the new Revel resort currently under construction in Atlantic City.

Cagley & Tanner’s work has been profiled and praised in Conde Nast Traveler, Elite Traveler, Interior Design, Vegas Magazine and Hospitality Design, as well as Travel & Leisure. Sean Tanner, a principal of the firm, received the 2008 Wave of the Future award from Hospitality Design, and Jeremy Morse, a senior project designer with the company, received recognition from Boutique Design magazine as one of the Boutique 18-young, upcoming professionals who will change the face of design.

Cagley & Tanner has designers of long standing, with more than 30 years of experience in the field of interior design, as well as a cadre of young, talented professionals with unique and unconventional ideas. Their commitment to bespoke, custom-designed furniture, lighting, millwork, textiles and hardware assure that each project for every client is unique and original, rather than just another edited collection of the latest fads.

Their current client list includes the owners of resort hotel, residential and gaming interiors worldwide.

For more information, visit www.cagleyandtanner.com.

Global Growth

Bergman Walls & Associates Ltd. Architects specializes in resorts, casinos, condo-hotels, retail, dining and entertainment venues and was founded by Chairman Joel Bergman and President/COO Scott Walls. Bergman and Walls have experience working with Steve Wynn on projects such as the Mirage “mega-resort” concept, three Golden Nuggets and Treasure Island as in-house architects.

With these accomplishments as background, they formed BWA in January 1994. The BWA team now includes partners Joe Rothman, George Bergman, Leonard Bergman, Robert Fredrickson, Rene Rolin and Darrell Wood, who make up a union of experienced, energetic and diverse professionals. The team’s invaluable and visionary experience influences BWA’s approach to design for projects of all sizes and types. The firm has built projects in Europe, Australia, Africa, South America, Asia and the United States.

The company’s headquarters are located in Las Vegas and are comprised of a staff of 112 design professionals. Recently, BWA opened a Los Angeles office, which currently has a staff of five. Services provided include architecture, interiors, theming, conceptual design, three-dimensional visualization, schematic design, design development, construction documents and construction administration. All work is completed in-house, allowing the partner-in-charge to commit personal attention to all phases of the project, from conception through construction to occupancy.

Many of BWA’s projects are icons that define their genre. These include the Mirage, Paris Casino Resort, Caesars Palace (Augustus and Palace Towers), Trump International Hotel & Tower, the Signature at MGM Grand, and L’Auberge du Lac Hotel & Casino in Lake Charles, Louisiana.

Current projects include the Las Vegas Fontainebleau Casino Resort, Caesars Place Octavius Tower and Convention Center, the Rivers Casino in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Sugarcane Bay Casino Resort in Lake Charles, Louisiana, and several master plan design analyses. Expansion and renovation projects include the Golden Nugget Las Vegas, Las Vegas Hilton Hotel, and the Tower expansion for L’Auberge du Lac Hotel & Casino.

BWA’s dining and entertainment venues include LAX Nightclub, PURE Nightclub and Pussycat Dolls Lounge, Payard Patisserie & Bistro, restaurants Guy Savoy and Rao’s, Casa Fuente, Lucky Strike, Dick’s Last Resort, Trader Vic’s, the Capital Grille Las Vegas and Scottsdale, Café Ba-Ba Reeba, and Becker’s Steakhouse.

The firm is proud to have several Native American clients, including Mystic Lake Casino Hotel and Little Six Casino for the Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community, Casino Snoqualmie for the Snoqualmie Indian Tribe, Salishan-Mohegan Casino for the Mohegan and Cowlitz Indian Tribes, Barona Valley Ranch Resort Casino for the Barona Band of Mission Indians, and conceptual and master planning designs for various California tribes and elsewhere.

International projects are located in Thessaloniki, Greece, Melbourne, Australia, and Ghana, West Africa. BWA currently has studies on its boards for Tokyo, Bucharest, Romania, and Lima, Peru.

Based upon the firm’s successful past experience, the team at BWA believes its approach will continue to produce projects that are economically viable, operationally efficient and visually exciting. At Bergman Walls & Associates, the goal is simple: That its projects be remembered for their distinctive architecture, and ultimately for their financial success.

For more information, visit www.bwaltd.com.