Margaritaville Resort Casino Biloxi
- The 370 room, 23 story resort features a 55,000 square foot Indoor Family Entertainment Center, Escape, which offers a rock climbing wall, ropes course and a cloud roller coaster among other attractions.
- Offering a seasonal outdoor pool and terrace, Margaritaville Resort Biloxi is in Mississippi, 350 yards from St Michael's Catholic Church. There is a water park on site and guests can enjoy the on-site restaurant. Free private parking is available. Each room includes a flat-screen TV.
- Margaritaville Resort Biloxi is the perfect intersection of laid-back tropical vibes and impeccable, no-detail-missed service.
- Margaritaville Casino Resort Biloxi Ms
- Margaritaville Resort Biloxi Casino
- Margaritaville Resort Casino Biloxi Ms
Margaritaville Resort Biloxi | |
---|---|
Former names | Casino Magic Biloxi |
General information | |
Location | Biloxi, Mississippi |
Address | 195 Beach Boulevard |
Opened | June 5, 1993 (as Casino Magic) June 23, 2016 (as Margaritaville) |
Closed | August 28, 2005 (as Casino Magic) |
Owner | Cono Caranna |
Other information | |
Number of rooms | 373 |
Website | |
margaritavilleresortbiloxi.com |
Margaritaville Resort Biloxi September 4 at 7:00 AM If you haven't registered, there will be one last in-person registration Wednesday, Sept. 9th, 4-8:30 pm in front of Landshark Restaurant.
Margaritaville Resort Biloxi is a resort hotel in Biloxi on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. It previously operated with a dockside casino as Casino Magic Biloxi Casino & Hotel, until it was severely damaged by Hurricane Katrina in 2005. The property has a 373-room hotel, located on 10.6 acres (4.3 ha) of land.[1]
Casino Magic and its neighbors, the Isle of Capri Biloxi and Grand Casino Biloxi made up a district known as 'Casino Row'.[2]
History[edit]
Margaritaville Casino Resort Biloxi Ms
Casino Magic[edit]
Casino Magic Corp., operator of a casino by the same name in the Gulf Coast town of Bay St. Louis, unveiled plans in January 1993 for a second casino barge, to be located in Biloxi next to the Isle of Capri casino at Point Cadet. The casino would be three stories, with a companion five-story floating parking garage.[3] The casino opened on June 5,[4] at a cost of $55 million.[5] Additional space opened in December, bringing the total to 55,000 square feet (5,100 m2) of gaming, with 1,160 slot machines, 69 table games, and a keno parlor.[6]
Regulations required Casino Magic to build a 250-room hotel or spend at least a quarter of its investment on land, but the company met this requirement by developing its Bay St. Louis property, where it built a hotel, marina, RV park, restaurants, and a golf course.[7] Without such amenities, the Biloxi casino largely relied on bus tours and day-trippers from nearby states.[8] A $9-million parking garage was built in 1994, with plans to build a $15-million hotel on top of it,[9] but the company wavered on those plans because of the high expense.[10] In 1995 it bought Casino One Corp., which held a lease and option on 4.5 acres (1.8 ha) of land adjacent to Casino Magic, from the Gaming Corporation of America for $13 million in stock.[7] The land was initially earmarked for parking, with a possible hotel and retail complex in the future.[7]
Finally, though, the company pressed forward with the hotel on top of the parking garage, part of a $22-million plan begun in 1996, including a new facade and restaurant.[11] The 378-room hotel opened on May 1, 1998.[12] The company hoped it would help attract more high-end players from among the new overnight guests drawn by expanded jet service at the Gulfport-Biloxi Airport.[8]
In October 1998, the property came under the ownership of Hollywood Park, Inc. (later Pinnacle Entertainment), which bought Casino Magic Corp. for $340 million.[13] Pinnacle quickly sold off the Bay St. Louis property, along with its Boomtown Biloxi casino, enabling it to focus resources on Casino Magic Biloxi.[14] Plans included two new parking garages to be built jointly with the Isle of Capri and Grand Casino,[15] and an additional 300-room hotel, possibly to be developed with Jimmy Buffett under his Margaritaville brand.[16] Construction plans for the new hotel were pushed back to 2006, though, while Pinnacle focused on building the L'Auberge du Lac Resort in Louisiana.[17]
Destruction by Hurricane Katrina[edit]
Planning for a hurricane strike began early in the property's history. The company hoped to install an anchoring system in Biloxi's Back Bay, where the barges could weather a storm away from the open sea, but the plan was rejected by local officials who feared the vessels could become debris, and damage homes or bridges.[18][19] Instead, Casino Magic installed a massive mooring system, and acquired a submersible barge that could be sunk offshore from the barges to act as a breakwater.[20] The first hurricane to strike the region after the opening of casinos was Hurricane Georges in 1998, a Category 2 storm which caused $2.5 million in damage to Casino Magic.[21]
In 2005, with Hurricane Katrina approaching, the state ordered all coastal casinos to close on August 28.[22] The storm made landfall the next day, and the storm surge carried the Casino Magic barge 400 feet from its mooring spot,[23] leveling a pawn shop across Beach Boulevard,[24] and sections of the hotel building were destroyed.[25]
Pinnacle initially said it would rebuild the casino,[23] but later said it might instead put the insurance settlement money into its two casinos being developed in St. Louis,[26]Lumière Place and River City Casino. It ultimately decided to exit the Biloxi market, giving Casino Magic plus $25 million to Harrah's Entertainment, owner of the adjacent Grand Casino, in exchange for a hotel and two riverboat casinos, heavily damaged by Hurricane Rita, in Lake Charles, Louisiana.[27][28][29]
Margaritaville[edit]
Margaritaville Resort Biloxi Casino
Harrah's joined with Jimmy Buffett in 2007 to begin construction on the $700-million Margaritaville Casino Resort,[30] which would incorporate the Casino Magic hotel tower.[31] Construction was suspended, however, in 2008, due to the financial crisis and Harrah's near-bankruptcy after being taken private.[32] In 2011, Buffett announced new plans for what would become the Margaritaville Casino and Restaurant, elsewhere in Biloxi, marking the end of his project with Harrah's.[33] The city later declared the hotel tower a blighted building, demanding that it be repaired or demolished.[34]
After the Margaritaville Casino closed in 2014, developer Cono Caranna announced new plans for a Margaritaville Resort on the Casino Magic site.[35] The family-friendly, non-gaming resort opened on June 23, 2016.[36]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^Annual Report on Form 10-K (Report). Pinnacle Entertainment. March 16, 2005. p. 11. Retrieved 2012-05-27.
- ^'3 Biloxi casinos extend marketing partnership'. Mobile Register. via NewsBank. June 28, 2001. Retrieved 2012-05-27.(subscription required)
- ^'Casino Magic announces plans for casino in Biloxi'. The Advocate. Baton Rouge: via NewsBank. AP. January 6, 1993. Retrieved 2012-05-24.(subscription required)
- ^'Magic issues annual report'. The Sun Herald. Biloxi: via NewsBank. March 5, 1994. Retrieved 2012-05-24.(subscription required)
- ^Snyder, David (September 27, 1993). 'Bay St. Louis casino has room to grow'. The Times-Picayune. New Orleans: via NewsBank. Retrieved 2012-05-24.
His organization has invested $55 million in Casino Magic Biloxi, which opened in June...
(subscription required) - ^'Casino Magic expands casino operations in Biloxi' (Press release). Casino Magic. December 20, 1993. Retrieved 2012-05-24.
- ^ abcTaylor, Louise (May 31, 1995). 'Magic completes Casino One deal'. The Sun Herald. Biloxi: via NewsBank. Retrieved 2012-05-25.(subscription required)
- ^ abPalermo, Dave. 'Casinos add magic to coast'. The Sun Herald. Biloxi: via NewsBank.(subscription required)
- ^Hughlett, Mike (August 28, 1994). 'The game it is a-changin: Casinos must learn which ones to hold, and which ones to fold'. The Times-Picayune. New Orleans: via NewsBank. Retrieved 2012-05-24.(subscription required)
- ^Taylor, Louise (January 20, 1995). 'Casino has 'magic' touch at hearing'. The Sun Herald. Biloxi. Retrieved 2012-05-24.(subscription required)
- ^McKinney, Kevin (March 2, 1996). 'Magic in the works: Hotel just a part of Biloxi casino's plan'. The Sun Herald. Biloxi: via Newsbank. Retrieved 2012-05-25.(subscription required)
- ^Palermo, Dave (May 31, 1998). 'Casinos likely to stand up to Category 3 storm'. The Sun Herald. Biloxi: via NewsBank. Retrieved 2012-05-25.(subscription required)
- ^Palermo, Dave (October 17, 1998). 'Casino Magic sale goes through'. The Sun Herald. Biloxi: via NewsBank. Retrieved 2012-05-25.(subscription required)
- ^Palermo, Dave (August 10, 2000). 'Penn finishes casino purchase'. The Sun Herald. Biloxi: via NewsBank. Retrieved 2012-05-27.(subscription required)
- ^Palermo, Dave (December 31, 2000). 'Is gambling industry headed for slowdown?'. The Sun Herald. Biloxi: via NewsBank. Retrieved 2012-05-27.(subscription required)
- ^Palermo, Dave (August 2, 2000). 'Margaritaville plans still alive'. The Sun Herald. Biloxi: via NewsBank. Retrieved 2012-05-27.(subscription required)
- ^Boone, Timothy (November 4, 2003). 'Biloxi Magic delays tower'. The Sun Herald. Biloxi: via NewsBank. Retrieved 2012-05-27.(subscription required)
- ^'Residents fear Coast casinos'. The Advocate. Baton Rouge: via NewsBank. November 19, 1993. Retrieved 2012-05-25.(subscription required)
- ^'Corps denies plea for casino harbor'. Mobile Register. via NewsBank. AP. December 3, 1993. Retrieved 2012-05-25.
- ^Patriquin, Ronni (August 3, 1995). 'Hurricane shuts down Mississippi casinos Isle of Capri heads for safe harbor; other gaming palaces give first test of previously untried emergency procedures'. Mobile Register. via NewsBank. Retrieved 2012-05-25.(subscription required)
- ^Palermo, David (October 10, 1998). 'Biloxi Grand floored'. The Sun Herald. Biloxi: via NewsBank. Retrieved 2012-05-25.(subscription required)
- ^Wilemon, Tom (August 28, 2005). 'Gaming Commission closes casinos'. The Sun Herald. Biloxi: via NewsBank. Retrieved 2012-05-27.(subscription required)
- ^ abStutz, Howard (September 3, 2005). 'Pinnacle executive says Casino Magic will be rebuilt'. Las Vegas Review-Journal. Retrieved 2012-05-27.
- ^Smith, Wes (September 1, 2005). 'Biloxi Bay casinos crash ashore'. Orlando Sentinel. via NewsBank. Retrieved 2012-05-27.(subscription required)
- ^Candance Rondeaux; Justin George; Thomas C. Tobin (August 31, 2005). 'Everyone out: New Orleans drenched and desperate'. St. Petersburg Times. via NewsBank. Retrieved 2012-05-27.(subscription required)
- ^Wilemon, Tom (November 9, 2005). 'Has Pinnacle Entertainment lost its interest in Biloxi?'. The Sun Herald. Biloxi: via NewsBank. Retrieved 2012-05-27.(subscription required)
- ^'Pinnacle, Harrah's plan to exchange damaged casinos'. Las Vegas Sun. AP. May 31, 2006. Retrieved 2012-05-27.
- ^Millhollon, Michelle (August 16, 2006). 'Pinnacle weighs casino location'. The Advocate. Baton Rouge: via NewsBank. Retrieved 2012-05-27.(subscription required)
- ^'Harrah's completes Casino Magic Biloxi buy' (Press release). Harrah's Entertainment. November 10, 2006. Retrieved 2012-05-27.
- ^Perez, Mary (August 14, 2007). 'Margaritaville breaks ground'. The Sun Herald. Gulfport, MS: via NewsBank. Retrieved 2012-05-23.(subscription required)
- ^Perez, Mary (December 21, 2011). 'Derelict Casino Magic hotel tower added to blighted list'. The Sun Herald. Biloxi: via NewsBank. Retrieved 2012-05-27.(subscription required)
- ^Burnham, Maria (June 26, 2010). 'Hopes fade for quick restart on Harrah's casino'. The Tribune. Greeley, CO. AP. Retrieved 2012-05-23.[permanent dead link]
- ^Perez, Mary (January 13, 2011). 'New Margaritaville in the works'. The Sun Herald. Gulfport, MS: via NewsBank. Retrieved 2012-05-23.(subscription required)
- ^Perez, Mary (May 3, 2012). 'Caesars writes off unfinished Biloxi casino'. The Sun Herald. Biloxi: via NewsBank. Retrieved 2012-05-27.(subscription required)
- ^'Margaritaville returning to Biloxi, without a casino'. ABC News. AP. April 4, 2016. Retrieved 2016-04-04.
- ^Perez, Mary (June 23, 2016). 'Margaritaville comes back big in Biloxi'. The Sun Herald. Biloxi. Retrieved 2016-06-30.
External links[edit]
Coordinates: 30°23′27″N88°51′44″W / 30.390810°N 88.862094°W