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Expect to pay at Nugget's new tower

Landry's chief not planning to cut rates

Don't expect the Golden Nugget to slash room rates just to fill its new 500-room tower with warm bodies at any price, the hotel-casino's top executive said this week.

Tilman Fertitta, Houston-based Landry's Restaurants chairman, chief executive officer and majority shareholder, said the property has not dropped its rates to compete with other properties and doesn't plan to do so.


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"We're not going to drop rates just to turn dollars," Fertitta said. "I'd rather not have all the bodies. It's got to be profitable dollars for us to rent a room."

The Golden Nugget's new $150 million hotel tower opened Friday morning, and was largely sold for its first weekend. The 25-story tower includes four penthouse suites, 70 junior corner suites and standard rooms 20 percent larger than standard rooms in the other towers.

In fact, though, rooms at the new tower aren't going for what they were priced at even a month ago when the opening date was announced.

In mid-October, the hotel was pricing rooms at $142 per night for opening weekend.

The hotel now is advertising rooms in the new Rush Tower on its Web site for an average of $89 per night, while travel Web site Expedia.com has rooms listed for an average price of $102 per night.

Fertitta conceded that the economic downturn is making it difficult for the hotel to attract the type of customers the property wants.

"The Wynn and the Bellagio aren't getting the customers they thought," Fertitta said. "If they're not getting the customers they want, I can guarantee you I'm not getting the customer I want. That's just life and a cycle we're in right now. It's something we're all going to work through. Hopefully, it will all work out."

The Golden Nugget's addition is the first new hotel tower to open downtown since former Golden Nugget owner Steve Wynn built the South Tower in 1989.

It brings the Golden Nugget's room count to 2,417, the largest downtown.

Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman, who will attend a grand opening celebration for the tower at 4:30 p.m. Monday, praised Landry's for investing in the downtown market, which struggled for years even before the economic downturn.

Landry's has spent more than $300 million on improvements at the Golden Nugget since buying the property in 2005 for $295 million in cash and debt assumption.

The Rush Tower has its own porte cochere and includes $1 million in landscaping for the entrance on First and Carson streets.

In addition to the tower, the Golden Nugget is adding a new 200-seat Chart House restaurant, three new retail shops and new casino space.

The expansion added nearly 100 new jobs, spokesman Justin McVay said, mostly in the restaurant and shops.

Bill Lerner, a principal at Union Gaming Group, expects the new tower to have little effect on the local gaming market.

"As great as it's going to be for that part of the market, I don't think it grows the market," Lerner said. "I don't think you drive new volume, visitation into downtown because of a new hotel tower."

But Roy Smolarz, a New York City-based finance expert who was an adviser on the Binion's sale in 2008, said other downtown operators are welcoming the new tower because it focuses new attention on downtown.

"It is a different situation than what is coming on line and the concerns about CityCenter flooding (the market) with 4,000-plus rooms," said Smolarz, who focuses on investment banking, real estate, gaming and leisure industries as managing director for the firm Dominick & Dominick. "There is a critical need for additional quality in the Fremont Street corridor. Downtown truly needs state-of-the-art rooms."

Contact reporter Arnold M. Knightly at aknightly@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3893.

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The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The reviewjournal.com does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please notify the web editor.

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Al wrote on November 26, 2009 10:20 AM: Hmmm...the Golden Nugget isn't getting the customer Tilman wants? Shocking. Maybe its because the customers Tilman wants don't get the service or the amenities that they want. I am fairly certain that I won't go back to the Nugget. It took 45 minutes to check in! 45! And then housekeeping only visited my room once during a three day stay. I can guarantee you that when I stay at the Wynn, the check in will be faster and the housekeeping staff will come at least once a day to make over my room. Instead of building a new tower, maybe Landry's should have invested the money in hiring and training staff to take care of their existing property an guests. And, maybe they should remember that they are guests and not customers.


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Jack wrote on November 25, 2009 02:42 PM: I have been going to the GN for 20 years and ever since the "Houston Fertitta Brother's" took over their customer service skills are severly lacking. I must admit they know how to run a restaurant BUT NOT a CASINO. You can tell by his statement: I'm not getting the Customer I want"


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Joe wrote on November 25, 2009 09:44 AM: Just what Vegas needs now: A new Hotel!!!


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WILL wrote on November 24, 2009 12:21 PM: I'M SURE THE NEW ADDITIONS ARE BEAUTIFUL AND MAKES THE GN THE NICEST HOTEL DOWNTOWN. SHAME THEY KNOW NOTHING ABOUT CUSTOMER SERVICE...WHICH IS THE WORST I'VE EXPERIENCED DOWNTOWN.


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Vernon wrote on November 22, 2009 04:34 AM: I have been going to Vegas for 30 years and have found that the prices at the Nugget were not out of line with lets say staying at other hotels off the strip and even out towards Henderson. You also have things to do other than gambling right at hand and I have found Great Service while staying there. They could be better, but everything good be better! I will be staying there for 8 eight days during New Years & am looking forward to it. JUST NEED A GREAT VIEW OF THE STRIP.


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LasVegasGinger wrote on November 21, 2009 06:17 PM: Its worth every penny to stay in a swank new room that has never been used. New beds, linens and carpet- the rooms look beautiful, The Golden Nugget is the best casino downtown. Great sevice, terrific entertainment at the Rush Lounge and Gordie Brown is hilarious. Ill see you there...


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OhSee wrote on November 21, 2009 04:31 PM: Serious, for the record this us the RJ site not the Sun. Seriously, you should pay attention, it doesn't cost much!


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stationary wrote on November 21, 2009 04:22 PM: I equate Tilmans timing to that of his cousins. Mortgage the property to the hilt, amidst bad economic conditions. Watch the negative numbers flow in. Declare bankruptcy and press to eliminate creditors equity in the property so Tilman comes out smelling like another Fertitta, and they stink.


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paco wrote on November 21, 2009 03:16 PM: Unfortunately the rooms at the Rush Tower are not being offered for $69 a night online (midweek). It is a shame because the place looks great, but his credit rating is in the ~house, because people don't want to pay that kind of money to stay downtown. Unfortunately as they say, "turnarounds rarely turnaround". Carson tower is now at $39 a night (used to be called South Tower).


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BayDrake wrote on November 21, 2009 11:09 AM: Ya know, it's not fancy hotel rooms that bring people into a casino, it's a friendly outgoing staff, and a warm welcoming vibe. And I don't mean overly-loud ultra-groovy disco music on the Muzak. I remember the old days, when you'd sit down at a blackjack table, and the wiley old dealer would look up and greet you, and more likely than not he'd keep up a friendly sly banter throughout your time sitting with him: laughter, win or lose. Now, some of these Asian women! They never bother to welcome you, their smiles seem artificial & painted on, and it's so obvious the casino management hired them for how quickly they just shuffle and deal deal deal the cards. Well, Earth to Las Vegas, people want to HAVE A GOOD TIME in a casino, not just be made to feel they are robot consumers here to improve Nevada's economy & the bottom line. For the same reason, I wonder if City Center will succeed. Who cares about big glass buildings and heaping mounds of "luxury", if what goes on inside these dazzling structures is just another version of 21st century corporate soul-less-ness.


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