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Wild Wild West Gambling Hall & Hotel

Historic demolished hotel and casino in Nevada, United States
This article is about the casino-hotel in Las Vegas. For the casino in Atlantic City, see Bally's Atlantic City.
Days Inn - Wild Wild West Gambling Hall & Hotel
Location Paradise, Nevada, U.S.
Address 3330 West Tropicana Avenue
Opening date1974; 51 years ago (1974)
Closing dateSeptember 7, 2022; 2 years ago (2022年09月07日)
ThemeOld West
No. of rooms260[1]
Total gaming space11,250 sq ft (1,045 m2)[2]
Casino typeLand-based
OwnerStation Casinos
Previous namesKing 8 Hotel and Casino
Renovated in1998
Websitewildfire.sclv.com/Wild-Wild-West

The Wild Wild West Gambling Hall & Hotel was a hotel and casino in Paradise, Nevada, near the Las Vegas Strip. It was owned and operated by Station Casinos. While the casino and adjoining 260-room hotel were relatively small, the site is over 58 acres (23 ha)[3] in size.

The Wild Wild West Plaza is located in the parking area and provides services common to a convenience store.

History

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Built in 1974,[4] the property originally operated as the King 8 Hotel and Casino. The King 8 was owned by Will Roberts and Olind Jenni, who also owned a King 8 hotel in Fairbanks, Alaska.[5] In February 1988, the King 8 was purchased by the Los Angeles-based Hotel Investors Trust, which planned improvements of the hotel-casino at a cost between 15ドル million and 17ドル million.[6]

In 1996, J.A. Tiberti Construction Company purchased the King 8 from Starwood Lodging Trust.[7] [8] In May 1998, after several months of discussions, Station Casinos announced a partnership agreement to lease the property from Tiberti and take over operations. At the time, the King 8 had 283 hotel rooms, a coffee shop, and 230 slot and video poker machines.[7] The hotel's 250 employees had to reapply for their jobs under Station Casinos.[9] The King 8 closed on July 1, 1998, to allow for remodeling.[9] [10] A new sportsbook and restaurant were among the improvements made at the King 8, which reopened as the Wild Wild West Gambling Hall & Hotel on July 13, 1998.[10]

In 2005, Station Casinos started purchasing land next to the property it already owned. While no specific plans were announced, it was widely expected that this indicated a major redevelopment at the location.

By 2008, the site had evolved to nearly 1/2-square-mile or 110 acres (45 ha) at a cost of 335ドル million. With a working title of Viva, the three casino, hotel condo arena project would cost 10ドル billion to develop.[11]

Stations Casinos reached an agreement with Days Inn in 2009 to market the casino hotel under the Days Inn brand. The hotel was branded as Days Inn by Wyndham – Las Vegas at Wild Wild West Gambling Hall. As part of the negotiations, the rooms were remodeled to bring them up to Days Inn standards.[12] [13]

On September 2, 2022, Station announced that it would close and demolish Wild Wild West[14] to prepare the site for future development, in connection with adjoining acreage.[15] [16] It closed on September 7, 2022.[17] [18] In April 2023, Station agreed to sell 49 acres (20 ha) of the site to the Oakland Athletics, to be developed as a stadium for the team's anticipated relocation to Las Vegas only for this to be changed to the Tropicana Las Vegas a month later.[19] [20]

References

[edit ]
  1. ^ "Days Inn & Wild Wild West Gambling Hall". Las Vegas Weekly. Retrieved 2018年08月17日.
  2. ^ "Listing of Financial Statements Square Footage (2017 data)". Nevada Gaming Control Board. 2018年03月06日. p. 10. Archived from the original on 2018年06月20日. Retrieved 2018年08月17日.
  3. ^ Stutz, Howard (2005年04月01日). "Movies to roll before the dice". Las Vegas Review-Journal . Gaming Wire. Archived from the original on 2005年04月03日.
  4. ^ "Parcel Record". Clark County Assessor's Office. Archived from the original on 2018年08月17日. Retrieved 2018年08月17日.
  5. ^ Wade, Dell (1975年09月14日). "King 8 Names New PR" . Las Vegas Sun. Retrieved 2018年08月17日 – via NewspaperArchive.com.
  6. ^ "Hotel Investors Trust Buys Two Las Vegas Properties" . San Jose Mercury News. 1988年02月09日. Retrieved 2018年08月17日 – via NewsLibrary.
  7. ^ a b Berns, Dave (1998年05月15日). "Station says King 8 deal part of plan". Las Vegas Review-Journal. Archived from the original on 1999年09月03日.
  8. ^ "Ownership history". Clark County Assessor's Office. Archived from the original on 2018年08月17日. Retrieved 2018年08月17日.
  9. ^ a b Seals, Brian (1998年06月24日). "King 8 workers worry for their jobs as Station Casinos takes over". Las Vegas Sun. Retrieved 2018年08月17日.
  10. ^ a b "Opening of the Wild Wild West". Las Vegas Review-Journal. 1998年07月14日. Archived from the original on 2000年09月14日.
  11. ^ "Station's Vegas" . Retrieved 2008年05月10日.
  12. ^ Steve Green (2009年12月09日). "Station Casinos property to be renamed after Days Inn agreement". Las Vegas Sun . Retrieved 2009年12月09日.
  13. ^ Arnold M. Knightly (2009年12月09日). "Station strikes marketing deal with Days Inn". Gaming News . Retrieved 2009年12月09日.
  14. ^ "Wild Wild West Casino, Owned by Red Rock Resorts, Will be Demolished". casinoandslots.org. Retrieved 2022年10月03日.
  15. ^ Cruz, Martha (2022年09月02日). "Red Rock Resorts announces the closure, demolition of Wild Wild West Gambling Hall". KSNV. Retrieved 2022年09月03日.
  16. ^ Barnes, Jim (2022年09月02日). "Station Casinos closing another Las Vegas property". Las Vegas Review-Journal. Retrieved 2022年09月03日.
  17. ^ Stutz, Howard (2022年09月02日). "Red Rock Resorts to close and demolish its fourth casino for future development". The Nevada Independent. Retrieved 2022年09月03日.
  18. ^ Horwath, Bryan (2022年09月02日). "Wild Wild West to close for good, Station Casinos says". Las Vegas Sun. Retrieved 2022年09月03日.
  19. ^ Mick Akers (April 20, 2023). "Major-league deal: A's to purchase land near Strip for new ballpark". Las Vegas Review-Journal. Retrieved 2023年04月20日.
  20. ^ Stutz, Howard. "A's pivot to new site for Vegas baseball stadium, lowering public funding request". The Nevada Independent. Retrieved May 9, 2023.
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