ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) - The casino that would become The
Atlantic Club opened as The Golden Nugget in late 1980, an opulent pleasure
palace by the sea whose commercials featured owner Steve Wynn delivering fresh
towels to Frank Sinatra.
But next month, the casino will be stripped for parts and
sold to two larger competitors, neither of which has any interest in operating
it amid Atlantic City's shrinking casino market.
It will be an inglorious end for the Atlantic Club, which
says it will close on Jan. 13, reducing the number of casinos in the struggling
gambling resort to 11.
The Atlantic Club will be the first Atlantic City casino to
close since the Sands shut down in 2006 to make way for a new casino project
that never got built.
Two companies with casinos in Atlantic City, Tropicana
Entertainment and Caesars Entertainment, will pay a combined $23.4 million for
the business.
According to bankruptcy filings made Friday afternoon,
Tropicana will take the 1,641 slot machines and 48 table games for $8.4
million, while Caesars will get the property and its more than 800 hotel rooms
for $15 million.
A judge must approve the buyers at a hearing Monday.
"First and foremost I would like to express my profound
admiration and respect for the employees of this company," said Michael
Frawley, chief operating officer of the Atlantic Club. "The events of the
last few months have evoked an array of emotions, and through it all, the
employees of the Atlantic Club have remained consummate professionals. It is
because of these outstanding individuals that we were able to build
considerable momentum over the last year. Unfortunately our pace was
unsustainable in the extremely challenging Atlantic City gaming market."
He said the casino will operate normally until the Jan. 13
closing date. There were 1,659 employees at the casino-hotel as of Nov. 13.
"The workers at Atlantic Club have loyally served the
company for three decades," said Bob McDevitt, president of Local 54 of
the Unite_HERE union, representing hotel workers, beverage servers and other
casino service employees. "While we can't stop the Atlantic Club from closing,
we are going to do everything we can to fight for the workers to get as much as
possible in this tragic situation."
Caesars spokesman Gary Thompson said the company has no
plans to operate the hotel portion of the complex. Rather, he said, the company
will distribute the Atlantic Club's non-gambling assets to its four casinos in
Atlantic City - Caesars, Harrah's, Bally's and the Showboat - and will
"consider various options for the rest."
Tony Rodio, president of the Tropicana Casino and Resort,
declined comment Friday.
Word of the shutdown came on the fourth day of a bankruptcy
court auction.
The Atlantic Club thus became the first Atlantic City casino
to fall victim to the insidious downward spiral the resort has found itself in
since the advent of casinos in neighboring Pennsylvania that began in late
2006. Pennsylvania will soon have more casinos (12) than Atlantic City for the
first time ever.
Atlantic City's casino revenues reached a high of $5.2
billion that year, and will likely fall below $3 billion this year.
Analysts have long said Atlantic City has more casinos than
the now-diminished market can bear.
Another struggling casino, Revel Casino Hotel, could be
headed for a second bankruptcy filing, or could be sold to new owners soon.
Half of the 12 casinos currently operating in Atlantic City
have filed for bankruptcy in the last six years.
The Atlantic Club was formerly known as The Atlantic City
Hilton, and before that, as the original Golden Nugget in Atlantic City, not to
be confused with the former Trump Marina casino that now carries the Golden
Nugget name at the opposite end of town.
It struggled to compete against newer, bigger casinos here
and in Pennsylvania. For the past two years, it turned its focus to low-rollers
and local residents, offering cut-rate prices to attract those unable or
unwilling to afford the pricier casinos.
That effort improved the casino's financial picture, but not
quickly enough. It filed for Chapter 11 protection in November.
Its owners, Colony Capital LLC, the Los Angeles hedge fund,
paid more than a half-billion dollars for it in 2005.
It searched in vain for a purchaser for the past three
years, before inking a deal to sell itself to the PokerStars web site for $15
million. But that deal fell apart within months due to concerns over whether
the websites' management could qualify for a casino license in New Jersey due
to an unresolved indictment against the company's founder.
Source: Philly.com
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