AC never really had the "do something and do it now" to keep this gambling money in town.
Trains, buses, boats, convention centers, boxing matches... all to "save the boardwalk" or atleast "save the golden goose".
AC was the first adaptor of E. Coast Gambling, CT a distant 2nd, and as we all know other states/sovereign nations have followed. That puts AC/CT in some very difficult situations. But I must say being there in the 80's, AC was way too seedy/shady outside the gaming areas. I felt it was the Casino district only that was OK. Walking from Caeser's or Bally's to the Bus Depot/Train was at least an adventure in broad daylight. Over at Trump's Castle/Harrah's Marina one could drive right into garage alot easier than Downtown/Beach. Still, the neighborhoods were gritty in the area. Frankly, the suburban/near rural setting of Foxwoods/Mohegan Sun seemed a better place to be. And like MrV, I left AC by '92, Foxwoods in 99, and gaming in general in 05. Did any of these places leave a bitter taste... no. AC was pretty damn cool for a show and a gambit early on. That moved to Foxwoods also, but did not last as long, no way. The Sun had a good gambling atmosphere, but I never got used to the open areas so close to the gaming floor. As good as it looks, it never felt like a place kids should in. OTOH, I liked the Wolf Den at night some folks/bands could rock the joint for free.
Those days are gone. Downsizing a Casino/Hotel is never easy, and always overbudget.
That is my approximation of the number necessary to handle anticipated future demand.
Hello, "locals casinos."
There will always be some demand for gambling in south Jersey, but now there are simply too many casinos to service existing demand, due to increased competition.
And no, bringing back the diving horse won't save them.
They had their run, now it's pretty much over.
Quote: Wizard
I don't know of anything that will save AC. As somebody else wrote, they are destined to become Reno.
I've never been to either, but in my head I figured reno is better already given all the negativity I've heard about AC.
Did Reno suffer a huge decline in the past?
Amateur hour. And at a cost to taxpayers of many millions of dollars for barely patronized service.Quote: kewljIn remembering that NJ transit train ride there was another annoying thing about that ride. There was only one single track the whole way. There were several side track pullover spots where the train might have to pullover and stop to wait for the train going the other way to pass. This slowed the trip. There usually was at least one pullover, 5 minute wait on each trip. In the last year or so, before I moved, NJT started running a second non stop train (from NY) on those same tracks on weekends. This meant even more of those 5 minute side track wait periods.
Atlantic City is done. Revel failed, and the concept of "if you build it, they will come" was tried and failed. There is therefore nothing that will save AC except for shrinking the casino base and changing the land use back to condos and non-gaming hotels. The beach is pretty, but until you get the riff-raff away from Pacific Street and beyond, you're not going to increase values in that community. That requires gentrification that can only be achieved by getting rid of most of the casinos and bringing in people with money and pretty architectural projects that aren't casinos.
Close Revel, Showboat, Taj, Resorts, Ballys, Plaza, and the Hilton, leaving Borgata, Marina, Caesars, and Tropicana. Tear down the hotels, put up beachfront condos. Establish police. Beef up the college. Open up full-service casinos in Hoboken, Elizabeth, and Hackensack and blow away New York city. Up the slot take tax from the state and clean up Atlantic City.
Should the state and local officials in NJ done more to build up AC and south jersey in general when they were the only east coast gambling for 20 years. Yeah of course they should have. But it's wayyyyy toooo late for those measures to work. It is what it's going to be at this point.
Quote: sodawatervendman, NYC is opening three casinos soon. IN the city. That's gonna hurt AC a lot worse than any of the competition so far. How can you say the competition is maxing out? It's just getting started.
No, not IN the city. Way outside the city. The three casinos are going to be opened in upstate NY. No new casinos are allowed within NYC for I believe seven years, which was meant as a window for upstate NY to benefit from legalized gambling before the (supposedly) much better off city.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/01/nyregion/17-companies-file-casino-plans-with-new-york-state-in-push-for-4-gambling-licenses.html?_r=0
From the article:
"The state plans to select the winners sometime in the fall for three separate regions: the capital region around Albany, the Catskill and Hudson Valley areas, and an area in the central part of the state that stretches from Binghamton north to Lake Ontario."
Unfortunately a lot of times people refer to either as New York or NY.
"They just legalized casinos in NY."
"Oh, the city really needs them." (WRONG).
Quote: sodawatervendman, NYC is opening three casinos soon. IN the city. That's gonna hurt AC a lot worse than any of the competition so far. How can you say the competition is maxing out? It's just getting started.
As someone else has posted...the NY casinos are upstate not in the city. Upstate NY casinos have been around a while now. can't see it sucking much more business from AC. In addition the other states around AC are pretty much done opening casinos that will greatly impact the AC market. So yeah I think their gaming revenues are close to bottoming out. That should leave enough business for 6-8 casinos. The shrinking of the market has obviously begun already and I'm sure we will see another closing or two before things level off. But the whole gambling market is not going to completely collapse.
Quote: vendman1As someone else has posted...the NY casinos are upstate not in the city. Upstate NY casinos have been around a while now. can't see it sucking much more business from AC.
Yes there has been upstate casinos but none this close to NYC. It is very likely that at least 1 (and probably 2) of the "upstate" casinos will be in Orange county which is only a little more than 1 hour from NYC and even less from northern NJ. They WILL be a further competition to AC. My wife and I frequent AC a few times of year. When these new casinos are open they will be our "local" casinos and our trips to AC will certainly be reduced if not eliminated. As stated previously the licenses will be award this fall with opening required within 2 years.
Quote: Lemieux66Don't underestimate poker and table games. Once NY gets that it'll be huge.
Doesn't pretty much every casino in NY already have poker and Table games?
Quote: boymimboYonkers does not, and the one in NYC doesn't either. Some of the ones upstate do.
TurningStone does but that's very far away. The biggest thing I hate about the NYC area casinos is you simply can't beat any game they spread right now. Yet it's making a killing.