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Start of construction on Durango Station depends on economy

The 70-acre lot at Durango Drive just south of the Las Vegas Beltway slotted for Durango Station will continue to sit empty for who knows how long.

Station Casinos Inc. told a crowd at a public meeting in July that it planned to break ground on Durango Station next year with an opening in 2011 if market conditions held steady. The bottom dropped out of most hotel-casinos' profits over the two months that followed to slow Station Casinos' plans.


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  • "At the time, the plans were pending current economic conditions, and obviously, there was a real change and everyone, including for Station Casinos, felt it," Station Casinos spokeswoman Lori Nelson said. "Now is not the time for new development."

    A combination of the economic downturn and a lack of financing triggered the company to pull away a definite date for Durango Station, she added. The company reported a loss of $23.4 million for the third quarter ending Sept. 30.

    Once the company goes forward with Durango Station, its first phase will include a 201-room hotel tower, casino, pool, restaurants, movie theater and arcade, plus a 190,000-square-foot outdoor retail center similar to The District at Green Valley Ranch. The second phase will include an additional 525 hotel rooms.

    The local casino company purchased the Durango site eight years ago. It is one of nine vacant lots that Station Casinos owns for potential casino sites. The company's property includes a parcel on Boulder Highway, one at Cactus Avenue and Interstate 15, another at Flamingo Road and Town Center Drive and two sites in Reno.

    When the time is right, Station Casinos will start building, Nelson said.

    Timber Brown, who lives near the Durango site, is eager for a hotel-casino in southwest Las Vegas, where most every home and building is new.

    "I think it'd bring more people down here and bring in more jobs," he said. "There's not much out here now. It'd be a good landmark for this part of town."

    Locals will support another Station casino, said George Pativate, who also lives near the site.

    "Stations are more than just casinos," he said. "I like that they have movies, restaurants and entertainment, and they're open all the time. We don't have that down here right now."

    Station Casinos opened its $662 million hotel-casino, Aliante Station, in North Las Vegas on Nov. 11. Smokey Robinson broke in the casino's Access Showroom with its first concert on Nov. 15, not counting Sheryl Crow's VIP performance on opening night. His two shows sold out.

    "There's an overwhelming support and enthusiasm at the casino," Nelson said of Aliante Station. "North Las Vegas was completely underserved with entertainment options."

    Southwest Las Vegas is next on Station Casinos' list of sites.

    "The residents who are there right now have to travel a little farther," Nelson said. "Down the road, there will be a much more convenient location."

    Contact Southeast and Southwest View reporter Danielle Nadler at dnadler@viewnews.com or 224-5524.

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    Report abuse

    stevem wrote on November 24, 2008 02:19 PM: seriously...

    do we REALLY need any more of these things?

    have we not learned our lesson yet?


    how many one-industry, $9.00 per hour jobs to we need to bring to las vegas.


    how about a specialized medical school, a cancer treatment center, a national media outlet offices, etc.

    vegas is gross now.


    Report abuse

    concerned casino employee wrote on November 24, 2008 09:50 AM: I have a brilliant idea! How about boycot station casinos, and take your business and put it into the downtown hotels and strip hotels that are suffering but are willing to play fair with our jobs! Downtown is suffering, maybe the places arent as nice and lush as red rock but listen IF people gambled there which is where locals played before stations exploded then we could truely have a downtown revival. Stations top execs made tons more then the top execs at strip or downtown casinos. why you ask? well stations does give benefits but they dont offer the kind of benefits culinary workers get, we have retirement- they have a matched 401 K- look at the stock market- that idea has tanked now hasnt it? our medical plan and dentail is better- hands down. Locals bring us casinos that respect locals your business!!


    Report abuse

    ex gambler wrote on November 21, 2008 09:15 AM: sounds like we have a some disgruntled Station players who dropped one too many in that slot machine and now boast "boycott!" What a brilliant idea for the local economy...

    Did Stations care about the local economy when it sent 40 jobs overseas?

    You are some smart folks, let's all boyott Station Casinos, get rid of ALL those local jobs...


    Yes, before Stations has the arrogance to rid those jobs themselves.


    Report abuse

    interesting wrote on November 21, 2008 08:44 AM: sounds like we have a some disgruntled Station players who dropped one too many in that slot machine and now boast "boycott!" What a brilliant idea for the local economy - some great business minds in this blog...


    Report abuse

    John wrote on November 21, 2008 12:40 AM: Alliante wasn't much to see it looks like a smaller cheap version of red rock. Red Rock is dead no one is at it hardly and the machines are so tight better stay home and save your cash..


    Report abuse

    Larry wrote on November 20, 2008 11:36 PM: Those who were thinking that Durango Station Casino would increase the value of their homes just had another nail hammered into their mortgage coffins.


    Report abuse

    dt wrote on November 20, 2008 09:45 PM: Boycott? As in those semi homeless people who walk back and forth in front of Wal-Mart day after day? How about you go give a family in need a turkey moron


    Report abuse

    Paul wrote on November 20, 2008 09:32 PM: Station Casinos needs a major overhaul, starting at the top management slots.


    Report abuse

    mark wrote on November 20, 2008 07:49 PM: Yes we are smart folks. It's unfortunate that Stations will suffer if people boycott but we need to take a stand and keep jobs here. Employees can put pressure on management to bring those jobs back here.


    Report abuse

    Dave wrote on November 20, 2008 05:08 PM: You are some smart folks, let's all boyott Station Casinos, get rid of ALL those local jobs...


    Read All Comments