Business

Affinity Gaming targets Primm casinos for renovation

  • Photos by Jeff Scheid/Las Vegas Review-Journal

    Ferenc B. Szony, president and CEO for Affinity Gaming, looks over the Primm Valley resort and casino pool while talking on the cell phone on Thursday, Aug. 18, 2011. Affinity Gaming, the formerly Herbst Gaming and owner of the Primm area casinos, is remodeling the resorts. » Buy this photo

  • Jeff Scheid/Las Vegas Review-Journal

    Affinity Gaming Executive Vice President Loren Gill, left, and President Ferenc Szony stand Thursday outside the Primm Valley Resort. Gill serves as general manager of Primm Valley, Buffalo Bill's and Whisey Pete's. » Buy this photo

  • Photos by Jeff Scheid/Las Vegas Review-Journal

    Lifeguard Maxim Sosna puts up a sign at the Primm Valley hotel-casino Thursday. In a roughly $7 million makeover for property, Affinity Gaming renovated the hotel rooms, recarpeted and reconfigured the casino floor, added a fitness center and upgraded the buffet. » Buy this photo

  • Jeff Scheid/Las Vegas Review-Journal

    Primm Valley Executive Chef Nestor Rodriguez drizzles basil pesto on tomatoes Thursday in the hotel-casino's Country Club buffet. » Buy this photo

By Howard Stutz
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Posted: Aug. 19, 2011 | 4:10 p.m.

Affinity Gaming is finally doing what its predecessor, Herbst Gaming, had planned to do all along with the three properties in Primm -- turn the hotel-casinos into the company's top source for revenues.

The company emerged from a 15-month-long bankruptcy reorganization in December with a new name, a revamped ownership structure, and a stronger balance sheet that reduced long-term debt from $1.1 billion to a more manageable $350 million.

With the financial issues in the background, gaming operation is now Affinity's focus.

"These properties really just needed some love, tender care and some attention," Affinity Gaming President Ferenc Szony said of the casinos located off Interstate 15 near the California-Nevada border. "That's what we've been able to accomplish these past few months."

Together, the three Primm casinos -- Primm Valley, Buffalo Bill's and Whiskey Pete's -- constitute the largest cluster of hotel-casino operations in Affinity's portfolio, which covers 15 casinos in three states and a 6,000-slot machine route operation in Nevada.

The initial efforts were focused on a roughly $7 million renovation of Primm Valley, which has 624 of Primm's 2,643 hotel rooms. It is considered the high-end resort at Primm, with its low-rise hotel buildings that have a similar exterior to the Hotel del Coronado near San Diego, a connection to the Tom Fazio-designed golf courses just over the border in California, and an outlet shopping mall attached to the property.

The remodeling costs may not seem like a large figure, but Affinity made the most of its money. All of the Primm Valley hotel rooms were renovated, the casino floor was given new carpeting and reconfigured with 870 new slot machines, a spa and fitness center was added and the buffet was upgraded.

One change shelved was a renaming of the property to Terrible's, which was planned by Herbst.

A direct mail marketing campaign to Southern California will begin in the coming weeks and a television advertising effort will start up in February. The idea is to win back the customers lost from San Bernardino and Riverside counties and the Inland Empire cities, who turned toward California Indian casinos when the economy tanked and gasoline prices rose.

"The idea is to bring back the feeling in the operations when Gary Primm owned these places," Szony said of the original developer of the Primm market. "The focus is on customer service and value."

During a tour of Primm Valley, Loren Gill, general manager of the three resorts, stopped several times to greet familiar customers. Gill, who has been at Primm since April, spent several years as an executive with Boyd Gaming Corp. and Harrah's.

"Customer service is big for us and we have great properties for all markets," Gill said, adding that a promotional effort will also be focused on Las Vegas.

Over the next 18 months, the 1,242-room Buffalo Bill's and the 777-room Whiskey Pete's will also be remodeled. Affinity is expected to break ground next year on a travel center next to Whiskey Pete's in partnership with Flying J and Chevron Oil Co. to serve the thousands of truckers that pass Primm along Interstate 15. Szony said the travel center will give truckers a reason to stop for a while.

"These are important properties to our company," Szony said.

The company plans to market Primm as its own destination, where customers can spend time in the casino, golfing, shopping, dining and taking in a show at the Buffalo Bill's Star of the Desert arena.

Combined, the three Primm casinos have 1,480 employees, 13 restaurants and 2,455 slot machines.

In the second quarter ended June 30, Affinity had a net profit of $716,000 while net revenues grew less than 1 percent to $164.9 million. At Primm, revenues were $54.7 million in the quarter, up from $52.8 million a year ago.

Herbst Gaming spent $349 million in April 2007 to acquire the casinos from MGM Mirage (now MGM Resorts International). A few months earlier, Herbst spent $140 million to buy five Northern Nevada casinos.

The economy, which zapped business and revenues, kept Herbst from putting any effort into the Primm casinos.

"We're following through with our original plans," said Szony, who is one of the few holdover executives from the company's former management team. "It's just taken a while."

Contact reporter Howard Stutz at hstutz@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3871. Follow @howardstutz on Twitter.

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  1. Michael .Johnson Aug. 25, 2011 | 7:07 p.m. Report Abuse

    I just went over to the spa at Primm and it was great. The spa area was all nice and new and the service was great. I am very much looking forward to the new Primm. For a place that is 30 minutes away you can't beat the deals. You could spend 30 minutes finding a parking spot on the strip!

  2. lvsportsman Aug. 24, 2011 | 11:25 a.m. Report Abuse

    As a long time Primm customer, I think the changes will be great for Primm. I have already seen a rise in the service level at Primm Valley Resort. If you have a chance, be sure to try GP's Steakhouse.

  3. VegasSmith21 Aug. 23, 2011 | 9:27 p.m. Report Abuse

    I for one am looking forward to the new buffet and the new rooms. I love going to Primm for the concerts and the events. It is a nice break from the strip and the strip prices. I know that they have been working hard to improve the property and the customer service. I am excited by the new Primm.

  4. LongtimeLasVegan Aug. 22, 2011 | 1:51 p.m. Report Abuse

    Everything that was once reat at Primm has been slowly deconstructed over the last few years. The buffets used to be terrific and they became horrible. Whiskey Pete's used to be a great place to stay, and now it's not. Customer service was so bad the last time we went there it was the final nail in the coffin that has now become what were once great properties. I wish the new management good luck, they are going to need it.

  5. malander Aug. 20, 2011 | 8:24 p.m. Report Abuse

    So does Ferenc have billboards on I-15 with his picture all over them yet? That was his big marketing ploy at the Sands in Reno.

  6. denro Aug. 20, 2011 | 6:47 p.m. Report Abuse

    My Father knew Ernie Primm way back when he owned two major card clubs in Gardena CA, the Rainbow and the Monterey.

    Imagine the vision it took to build not one, two, but three properties that far outside of Las Vegas?

    My guess is Mr. Primm originally bought all that land as far back as the fifties.

    Real vision, I'll tell ya.

  7. RONALD.MCCORMICK Aug. 20, 2011 | 11:45 a.m. Report Abuse

    These guys have it all wrong. All things being equal people need a reason to stop at Primm. The reason isn't cheap food, cheap rooms or outlet shopping, its the one thing the other sawdust joints don't have, the Desperado roller coaster at Buffalo Bills. The focus should be on Buffalo Bills not Primm. With the rides and attractions and a Family Friendly atmosphere they would have the only game in town. While Junior and Sissy are riding the rides and playing arcade games Mom & Dad are in the casino dropping the rent money. As matter of fact the rides should be included as part of a family weekend package. That way Mom & Dad think they are getting something free and the Casino is getting rich. Primm management doesn't have a clue how or what to market.

  8. Bobbiebeegee Aug. 19, 2011 | 10:35 p.m. Report Abuse

    When Gary Primm owned those Casinos the slots were the worst paying slots in the world. I have no idea how/why the gaming commission let those Casino RIP off gamblers because there was no way those slots were LEGIT. By the time he sold them. He ran off most of the business as nobody would stop there. He ran off the customers.

  9. gehrig Aug. 19, 2011 | 8:47 p.m. Report Abuse

    will harry "the war is lost" reid's fast train from victorville stop at primm ? mebbe bring in and flense those victorville whales ? if not is there a one cent sale for implosions ? could be that one of those joints would make for a better beverly hillbillies joint if jethro bodine still has some trump. likely the county wouldn't 86 the oil drill rig derrick idea like they did up north.

  10. blazer Aug. 19, 2011 | 6:22 p.m. Report Abuse

    Is implode spelled with 1 or 2 m's?

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