Caesars Upscale
Tower Premieres
For nearly five years, Caesars
Palace has operated amid construction walls inside
and out as projects aimed at transforming the tired
theme property into a premier, upscale resort took
shape.
At 5 a.m. this morning, the last of those walls
came down as Harrah's Entertainment Inc. opened
the Palace's 949-room Augustus hotel tower at the
corner of Flamingo Road and Las Vegas Boulevard.
The tower, which also includes a 24-hour cafe,
two retail stores, a VIP lounge and three wedding
chapels to replace a single indoor chapel, caps
off a process that began in 2003 when previous owner
Caesars Entertainment opened the 4,100-seat Colosseum
Theater.
Since then the property has added a new convention
area, two celebrity-chef restaurants and additional
casino space with a bar, retail store and nightclub.
A poker room and the addition of other table games
are under way in the casino while a hotel spa and
Guy Savoy restaurant -- named for a three-star Michelin
chef with a namesake eatery in Paris -- will open
several months from now in the Augustus tower.
Harrah's has hired 600 people to staff the new
tower.
The rooms are designed to compete with the best
suites in Las Vegas rather than just the best Caesars
has to offer. It's a bold step for a property whose
stature has been undermined by newer resorts such
as Bellagio, Venetian, and most recently, Wynn Las
Vegas.
"I think these will compete very well with
the new wave of hotel rooms that have come to Las
Vegas," said Gary Selesner, who was recently
appointed president of Caesars Palace. "I think
the size and spaciousness are very competitive and
yet I think that the new, striking, contemporary
decor -- the use of a designer ... with a new take
on what it is to be Caesars Palace -- gives us a
very competitive room product."
The $289 million tower gives Caesars about 40 percent
more rooms -- a long-needed expansion given Las
Vegas' rapid tourism growth in recent years and
competition from major resorts with more rooms to
offer, Caesars executives have said.
The upgrade comes amid continued speculation that
Harrah's, which purchased Caesars Entertainment
in June, will eventually scale back the high-roller
business at its flagship property in favor of middle-income
business for which the company is known.
Rather than maintaining Caesars' high-roller business,
Selesner said the resort's high-end customer base
has grown under Harrah's. The company has already
begun the process of upgrading existing high-roller
suites across the property. Rooms in the Palace
Tower, the most recent tower to open before Augustus,
also will be upgraded to match the newest basic
suites over the next several months, Selesner said.
Rooms in the new tower consist of 874 suites from
650 square feet to 760 square feet, 23 suites at
1,060 square feet, six suites at 1,470 square feet
and 23 suites at 2,470 square feet.
The rooms have an ultramodern look and feature
dark woods, cream-colored carpets and eclectic art.
There are a few nods to Caesars' Roman-themed past,
including silken robes embroidered with busts of
Caesar and framed art of Roman statues. All the
suites feature plasma screen televisions in bathrooms,
bedrooms and sitting rooms. Voice-over-Internet
service is available for worldwide phone calls as
well as high-speed Internet service.
Some of the largest suites overlook the recently
built Roman Plaza and outdoor ampitheater, where
Caesars has held boxing matches and other sporting
events. Others overlook the Garden of the Gods,
the name for Caesars' four Roman-style pools.
The Augustus Tower lobby will become the resort's
main entrance, replacing a small, temporary lobby
that has served to check in hordes of visitors since
July 2004 while the tower was under construction.
The new lobby just about doubles the resort's original
entrance area and features giant mosaics on the
walls and an oversize marble fountain in the center.
The lobby, featuring a VIP valet entrance from
Flamingo Road, is designed to create a "sense
of arrival" for guests, Selesner said. With
the 24-hour cafe and retail store opening into the
lobby, the space also was intended to serve as a
place for guests to congregate rather than just
check in, Caesars spokeswoman Debbie Munch said.
Stock analyst Matthew Jacob of Majestic Research
said the tower should drive both gambling and hotel
revenue because visitors "often gamble where
they are staying."
In the year following Caesars' previous hotel tower
expansion in 1997, gambling volume grew 2 percent
from the previous year, Jacob said in a research
note to investors last month. Still, the property's
share of the Strip gaming market fell after the
December 1998 opening of Bellagio, the most expensive
and luxurious resort in Las Vegas at the time.
|