- Nevada Landing Hotel and Casino
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Nevada Landing Hotel and Casino Casino sign, which remained standing after the building was demolished. The sign was demolished in 2010. Address 2 Goodsprings Road
Jean, Nevada 89019Opening date 1989 Closing date March 20, 2007 Theme Riverboat No. of rooms 303 Total gaming space 35,800 sq ft (3,330 m2) Casino type Land-Based Owner MGM Resorts International Website stopatjean.com The Nevada Landing was a hotel and casino designed to resemble two riverboats. It was located in Jean, Nevada, near the California state line, within sight of Interstate 15. The hotel, owned by MGM Resorts International, had 303 rooms, four restaurants, over 800 slot machines (including video poker), live keno, table games, banquet facilities, and wedding services. The rooms featured air-conditioning, telephones, clock radios, private bathrooms, and televisions. The property was typically marketed with its sister hotel, the Gold Strike Hotel and Gambling Hall, located across the I-15 freeway.
History
The casino opened in 1989, built by a partnership that included David Belding, Mike Ensign and William Richardson. It was first owned by Gold Strike Resorts, and in 1995 was sold to Circus Circus Enterprises. Then in 1999 Circus Circus Enterprises became Mandalay Resort Group and in 2004 was a proposed $7.9 Billion merger with MGM Mirage.[1]
On February 12, 2007 MGM Mirage announced plans to close the casino on April 18, 2007, and build a master-planned community on the 166 acres (67 ha) it owned in the area in a joint venture with American Nevada Corporation and the Cloobeck Companies. The community was to include "affordable" housing, commercial businesses, shops, and a new hotel-casino. The Gold Strike would remain open, at least until the new hotel-casino was completed.[2]
On March 20, 2007 MGM Mirage closed the Nevada Landing in Jean almost a month earlier than it originally planned.[3]
Demolition began on the hotel in early March 2008. As of April 2008, the hotel was no longer standing, with the exception of the sign.
References
- ^ "History of ownership of Nevada Landing Casino in Jean". http://www.library.unlv.edu/arch/casinosbyname.html#n.
- ^ "Nevada Landing about to sink". Las Vegas Review-Journal (Las Vegas Review-Journal). February 13, 2007. http://www.reviewjournal.com/lvrj_home/2007/Feb-13-Tue-2007/news/12548470.html. Retrieved 2007-03-26.
- ^ "Nevada Landing shuts down early". Las Vegas Review-Journal (Las Vegas Review-Journal). March 30, 2007. http://www.reviewjournal.com/lvrj_home/2007/Mar-30-Fri-2007/business/13479843.html. Retrieved 2007-03-26.
External links
MGM Resorts International California Primm Valley Golf ClubConnecticut Illinois Mississippi Michigan New Jersey Borgata (owned by Marina District Development in which MGM has a 50% interest)Nevada Railroad PassLas VegasBellagio · Circus Circus · Excalibur · Luxor · Mandalay Bay · MGM Grand · Mirage · Monte Carlo · New York-New York · Shadow Creek · Slots-A-Fun · THEhotel · The Shoppes at Mandalay Place · CityCenter (Aria · The Harmon · Crystals · Veer Towers · Vdara)International Defunct Coordinates: 35°47′7″N 115°19′40″W / 35.78528°N 115.32778°W
Categories:- MGM Resorts International
- Defunct casinos in Nevada
- Casinos in Nevada
- Hotels in Nevada
- Jean, Nevada
- Buildings and structures completed in 1989
- Demolished hotels in Clark County, Nevada
- Hotels established in 1989
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