Wynn Endorses Miami Beach Casino Site

Wynn endorses Miami Beach for casino site

 

The land around the Miami Beach Convention Center is the “best” spot for a casino resort in all of South Florida, Steve Wynn says.

dhanks@MiamiHerald.com

Las Vegas mogul Steve Wynn vaulted into the center of South Florida’s gambling debate Wednesday by declaring the Miami Beach Convention Center site to be the region’s ideal option for a massive new casino resort.

“I think that Miami Beach is the greatest site for a destination resort in the United States,” Wynn said shortly after a lunch with the city’s mayor, Matti Herrera Bower, and its manager, Jorge Gonzalez.

Of the roughly 50 acres of Miami Beach-owned land that includes the convention center, parking garages and city hall, Wynn called it the “best” and added: “It has a huge footprint. Adjacent to a convention center that can be expanded and improved. It’s a site that is close to the ocean.”

Wynn’s sudden emergence on South Florida’s budding casino scene promises to reshape a debate that is gripping political leaders statewide.

In the casino industry, only Donald Trump eclipses Wynn’s fame and media coverage. A former CEO of Mirage Resorts who put his name atop his first signature Vegas hotel, Wynn also can boast of hometown roots, having spent his teenage years living in Miami Beach and working as a DJ in Hollywood.

“He’s not a carpet-bagger,” said Stuart Blumberg, the retired head of Miami-Dade’s largest hotel group and leader of an advisory panel for the convention center. “ I think Miami Beach is sitting in the catbird’s seat now.”

Until now, only two major players in the gambling world — Malaysia’s Genting and Wynn’s rival, Las Vegas Sands — were publicly laying claim to potential casino sites, and both are in downtown Miami.

Miami Beach is seen as a potential foe to a state bill designed to bring two casino resorts to Miami-Dade County. The city passed a resolution opposing gambling when its largest hotel, the Fontainebleau, began pursuing a casino several years ago. At a recent county hearing Gonzalez warned there weren’t enough high-rolling gamblers “in the world” to fill the 5,200-room casino resort that Genting plans on the Miami waterfront.

Gonzalez described the Wynn lunch as merely a meeting to listen to an interested company. “Anyone who is smart is going to look at that site,” he said. Bower said she wanted flexibility as Florida considers expanding its gambling laws and bringing a massive new casino across the bay in Miami. “We need to look at our options,” she said after the lunch.

City Commissioner Jonah Wolfson blasted the mayor and city manager for mingling with Wynn. “The mayor and the manager should be out there opposing it, not entertaining it,” he said of casino gambling. “I am extremely confident this is the wrong thing for our county.”

Wednesday offered a glimpse of Miami Beach’s potential as a major force in the casino industry. Wynn joined the recently reelected Bower and Gonzalez for lunch at Joe’s Stone Crab, one of the state’s most popular destinations for high-powered meals. After a plate of the South Beach establishment’s famed crab claws (sans bib), Wynn stopped for interviews with the Herald and NBC Miami, which were tipped to the mogul’s presence.

From there, Wynn and his wife boarded a black Cadillac Escalade for a trip to the New World Symphony and its rooftop garden. On the rooftop, the Wynn entourage — which included local commercial broker Lyle Stern — surveyed the roughly eight blocks of city-owned land comprising the convention center and surrounding facilities. From the ground, they were seen snapping photos and pointing across 17th Street to the location.


http://www.sanlorinproperties.com



Agent Login |  Guest Login

Home |  Contact Us
Powered By DPI Showcase Real Estate Web Sites
Copyright ©2003-2012 ShowCase. All Rights Reserved.