Ever-vigilant in his watch over “The Borg” (aka Caesars Entertainment), Vegas Tripping author Chuck Monster has been keeping a gimlet eye on the revival of Project Linq. Granted access to internal Caesars documents, Mr. Monster reveals that the much-needed makeover of the O’Shea’s/Imperial Palace slum neighborhood is but the first phase in something much bigger: the long-dormant Harrah’s America mega-über-ultraresort, also fleetingly known as “Epicentre.” (Something tells me casino developers are going to be avoiding titles with “Center” for a while.)
Questions remain begged, such as: What will the area use for emergency-vehicle access once the street between the Flamingo and O’Shea’s becomes a retail mall? The best news is that the cesspool known as O’Shea’s will become history, to replaced by a mid-market version of Crystals. At least some of the Japonaiserie will be scrapped off Imperial Palace and its hotel towers might actually receive the implosion that then-Harrah’s Entertainment planned for them when it bought the place in 2005. If aforesaid demolition eventually engulfed the Warsaw Pact “architecture” of claustrophobic Harrah’s Las Vegas, few would protest.
Of course, this seems the very devil of a time to go to Wall Street for financing … and never you mind that $18 billion in long-term debt hanging over the company like the Sword of Damocles. Heck, Caesars has been pleading poverty and rattling its tin cup at Nevada taxpayers in an effort to get a vanity stadium built out back of where its Ferris wheel will arise. Still and all, the sooner the first phase gets underway, the better. Besides, taking “Impotent Palace” and Harrah’s LV out of action will enable Caesars — and its competitors — to raise room rates on the Strip, by dint of manufacturing a supply/demand crunch. Strangely, the “Harrah’s America” idea was being pitched to Wall Street even as CEO Gary Loveman was hopping an E-ticket ride on the crazy train, shopping the mother of all LBOs to private-equity marks sober investors like Texas Pacific Group and Apollo Management. It was/is a grandiose 10-year scheme that should have been in Year Four at this point. Had Loveman not gone loco, we’d be writing about Imperial Palace in the past tense, as we pondered the impending implosion of Harrah’s LV.
Once you get past the “big swinging dick” rhetoric of CFO Jonathan Halkyard‘s tumescent Power Point presentation to Bank of America (available from S&G upon request), one sees that Harrah’s was in a period of strong cash-flow growth in 2006 and should have been able to fund the early stages of the master plan even in a Recession … if only Loveman hadn’t kneecapped his own company. Regardless of circumstances, scrapping a refit of Bally’s Wild Wild West in Atlantic City with the better-performing Horseshoe brand was a mistake. But it’s a good thing Loveman & Co. held off demolishing Harrah’s Marina in favor of something that looks suspiciously like Wynncore. The casino-hotel in its current form is regularly a top performer in the market (if it ain’t broke …) and a new Atlantic City megaresort could easily have run afoul of the monetary problems that stalled Revel for months on end.
The demolition of Bally’s Las Vegas, to be replaced with a Strip-side, Horseshoe-branded casino is an idea that’s been kicking around for a good six years … the worst-kept secret of the Loveman regime. It was to have begun two years ago, but with so many other Strip resorts-to-be stuck in the mud and waiting for demand to resume, it would be surprising were Bally’s to be imploded and rebuilt in this decade, if ever. Existing Caesars properties are in embarrassing states of disrepair and have been for years. Where’s the money for that? Or for Clark County-approved remakes of the Caesars Palace “pedestrian realm” and of access from the Las Vegas Strip into Paris-Las Vegas that have been gathering dust since the last three election cycles? As for pipe dreams like Baha Mar in the Bahamas and El Reino in Spain (whose logo was, aptly, Don Quixote), those went up in smoke along with Caesars’ credit rating. Now the company’s shopping around for hotel-development deals in India (“Horseshoe Mumbai”?).
“We will be careful of taking out a lot of capacity at once,” Halkyard pontificated to the money men. Too bad he didn’t exercise the same circumspection toward taking on a lot of debt. Project Linq would be a reality instead of an on-again, off-again mirage. Besides, as one of Chuck’s readers writes, “This still seems like a huge expense just to pay homage to the black guy from the Mod Squad.”

Would love a copy of the BoA report.
Has anyone considered if Harrah’s implodes Ballys where is Paris going 2 get it’s air conditioning and power from? It was built relatively cheap because they didn’t have 2 put N the physical plant 2 run it/
Love the last paragraph and the pic of Linc from Mod Squad!
For a company that’s $18 billion in debt, what’s another $500 million for a ferris wheel? Heck, the executive team paid themselves $7.75 million just a short time ago because of a BS excuse that they cut costs. Could there be a more Stupid business model?
5 will get you 10; any sum. This will turn out ot be another Loveman driven albratross.
Solid, dude, solid!
Definitely ship me the BoA report.
It’s not so much Loveman going loco, but more or less suffering from ADD. There is just a lack of coherency these days whenever he speaks, and he doesn’t have the out that the ever increasingly incoherent Steve Wynn has, that he’s getting on in years.
As for the $18 Million Man, himself, can anyone explain to me, or eve n better, his employees at Harrahs, exactly what he did to get that $18M, especially when housekeeping and facilities issues abound at many of there properties? When his employees are working harder than ever for less money? When every dime they make goes to debt service?
The whole thing is just plain outrageous.
And if you remember the quality of cocktail waitresses hired at the IP when Englestadt owned the property, you wouldn’t be saying “impotent”, but maybe it fits now in comparison lol…I stayed there once, in 1983, and the rooms were trash then, too. I hear things haven’t changed very much since then lol.
That’s funny, Seventy, because when I was on KNPR, I faulted Loveman for having the attention span of a small child. He forgot about finishing the Octavius Tower hella fast. Now, developing hotels in India is the Next Big Thing. No mention yet of where CZR is getting the money for it.
I’d like a copy of the boa report if you would please share Dave. Thanks!