Bally's acquired the Tropicana Las Vegas from GLPI in September 2022, with Bally's leasing the land underlying the hotel from GLPI as part of the transaction.
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An internal memo says the Tropicana will close between late 2024 and mid-2025 and strongly suggests the new resort will be given the Bally's name, which is convenient since the last hotel on the Strip, known as Bally's, was recently rebranded as the Horseshoe.
Station Casinos parent Red Rock Resorts announced this summer that it would demolish Texas Station, Fiesta Rancho and Fiesta Henderson — all of which had been closed since the onset of the pandemic — and sell the sites.
Riviera (colloquially, the Riv) was a hotel and casino on the Las Vegas Strip in Winchester, Nevada, which operated from April 1955 to May 2015. It was last owned by the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, which decided to demolish it to make way for the Las Vegas Global Business District.
Golden Gate Hotel & Casino: FirstsAs the city's original casino, Golden Gate Hotel & Casino brought about many Las Vegas “firsts”, including: 1905: Land for Golden Gate (previously Hotel Nevada) is purchased, making it the first casino in Las Vegas. 1907: Las Vegas' first telephone is installed at Golden Gate.
It is the first new resort to be completed on the Las Vegas Strip since the Cosmopolitan opened in 2010. At a cost of $4.3 billion, Resorts World is the most expensive resort property ever developed in Las Vegas.
Hard Rock International plans to close The Mirage, gut the entire three-wing hotel and casino and spend billions to expand and upgrade the property beginning in late 2023 or 2024, the company revealed Wednesday.
After winding down operations the hotel was closed and demolished to make way for a planned expansion of LVCVA's Las Vegas Global Business District exhibit and meeting center project. Due to its size, the Riviera was demolished through two separate implosions conducted in June and August 2016.
Why is Luxor closing? While no official announcement has been made, a decision to bring down Luxor during a period of weak demand due to the COVID-19 crisis could make sense for the resort's owner, MGM Resorts. The company has long felt its hands are tied by the distinctive, but limiting, Egyptian theme.