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  #181  
Old Posted Dec 4, 2007, 3:09 PM
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Guys, keep up the good work on this thread !

I was in Biloxi 2 days ago, and the casinos were really hopping. The Hard Rock appeared to be bringing in plenty of its target demographic.

The interesting thing to me is that the condo projects along the Mississippi coast appear to be moving forward, whereas the coastal condo market is practically dead in AL-FL.
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  #182  
Old Posted Dec 4, 2007, 4:59 PM
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Druid,

The coastal condo market is being propped up by GoZone, Insurance Money, and commitments to these projects in 2004/2005 that were held up because of Katrina. The coast has yet to be effected greatly by the credit mess going on.
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  #183  
Old Posted Dec 4, 2007, 9:32 PM
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Bayview Casino Resort

This Thursday, the developers of Bayview Casino Resort will ask the planning commission to rezone additional property to expand their footprint.


BILOXI PLANNING COMMISSION REGULAR MEETING

Community Development Auditorium

676 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard

December 6, 2007

2:00 p.m.


Case No. 07-120 – Bayview Avenue Development Group, L.L.C.; Biloxi Gaming Partners I, L.L.C.; and S & J, L.L.C. (owners) and Bayview Gaming Group, L.L.C. (applicant) – The purpose of the hearing is to consider a request for Zoning Map Amendment, to authorize a change in zoning for twelve (12) separate, but contiguous parcels of land bisected by a public right-of-way (i.e., Dacey Street), four and seventy-one one-hundredths (4.71) acres in overall size, from B-4 General Commercial and RS-5 Single-Family Residential – High Density to WF Waterfront, which change in zoning would allow said properties to accommodate potential, but unspecified, hospitality and/or gaming development uses, for properties identified as 645 and 655 Bayview Avenue, 443, 449, and 453 Braun Street; 445, 448, 451, 455, 457, and 463 Dacey Street, and one (1) unnumbered lot fronting upon Bayview Avenue (i.e., Municipal Tax Parcel Nos. 1410C-02-001.000, 1410C-02-007.000, 1410C-02-008.000, 1410C-02-009.000, 1410C-02-028.000, 1410C-02-029.000, 1410C-02-030.000, 1410C-02-031.000, 1410C-02-032.000, 1410C-02-032.001, 1410C-02-033.000, and 1410C-02-034.000 ).
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  #184  
Old Posted Dec 4, 2007, 10:31 PM
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wow, sixteen acres is pretty big. Build it bigger!
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  #185  
Old Posted Dec 5, 2007, 1:50 AM
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From tracking the construction camera, Harrah's seems to be moving along smoothly with construction. You can see buildings taking shape now.

Do any of the other construction sides, condos or other casinos, have construction cameras up on any of their sites that anyone knows about?

BLX any whispers yet from the Isle about their plans? I read today that the company noticed a decrease in overall revenue this quarter, and I hope that doesn't affect their plans.

On the Bayview Casino note, I really wish they would get a website and show off some renderings or provide more information on what they have planned.
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  #186  
Old Posted Dec 5, 2007, 2:58 AM
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Royal D'Iberville Casino

Posted on Tue, Dec. 04, 2007
D'Iberville hotel OK'd, but casino is tabled again
By MARY PEREZ
meperez@sunherald.com


D'IBERVILLE -- The Royal D'Iberville Casino isn't quite ready for Planning Commission review, but a Courtyard by Marriott has been approved.
Mark Seymour, developer of the Royal D'Iberville Casino, asked the commission to table his application for the fourth time. An application for a senior housing project was pulled off the agenda until next month, board chairman Paul Klobe said at last week's meeting.

The board did approve a conditional use for a five-story, 125-room Courtyard by Marriott on Cinema Drive, just east of the Grand Theater. The approval included permission to sell liquor at the limited-service hotel. Applicant Dwayne Rash said there is room in the area for a stand-alone restaurant so hotel guests will have a combination of restaurants, retail and theater in the vicinity.

Rash asked for a parking variance and said, "We do have enough parking spaces." The 157 spaces is 17 more than a one-to-one ratio, and he said both Hilton and Marriott corporations require only one parking space per room. The city previously gave a variance for Wingate Hotel and Rash said, "In 10 years of operation, we've had very little if any complaints."

The board also approved the application of Trung Minh Tran to build a Vietnamese Baptist Church on Third Avenue in an R-3 district.

A rear neighbor said it would be better to use the land for retail than to allow a church. He previously lived in East Biloxi and said he was concerned his shop would be burglarized, and asked the board to require an eight-foot fence be built to "keep the rest of the neighborhood shielded from that."

This is a Baptist church, Klobe reminded him, and commission member Donna Williams said, "We can't be judgmental by someone coming to D'Iberville."

The commission did require the church to complete the six-foot privacy fence at the back of the property. "I think it will protect you from the neighbors," said Klobe.

The commission tabled an application by Harris and Heinrich LLC for a 12-unit townhouse development at the corner of Leckich and Corries streets in a C-2 district because of poor drainage in the area. A conditional use for a 35-space FEMA trailer park off Lamey Bridge Road was denied because applicant William Meyer didn't bring a letter from FEMA stating there was a need for the park.

The D'Iberville City Council will consider these and the applications for D'Iberville Market Place Shopping Center and sign variances for a Target store Dec. 18.
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  #187  
Old Posted Dec 5, 2007, 3:04 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Velastor View Post
From tracking the construction camera, Harrah's seems to be moving along smoothly with construction. You can see buildings taking shape now.

Do any of the other construction sides, condos or other casinos, have construction cameras up on any of their sites that anyone knows about?

BLX any whispers yet from the Isle about their plans? I read today that the company noticed a decrease in overall revenue this quarter, and I hope that doesn't affect their plans.

On the Bayview Casino note, I really wish they would get a website and show off some renderings or provide more information on what they have planned.
The pace does appear to be picking up at the Margaritaville site. Unfortunately, there hasn't been any update on the Isle's plans.
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  #188  
Old Posted Dec 5, 2007, 4:51 AM
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Velastor, there is a construction cam there because it is a Yates project. He always likes to put cams at his projects. I am sure when/if the Revelay breaks ground a cam will go up there. RAC has not done that.

It is surprising that Royal was tabled again. I wonder if he is just making rumblings about that every couple of years to keep the property value high. Bayview plans will hopefully be out soon, but they would not release them to me because they were doing redone (obviously to add more size).

I cannot wait for the Isle to release some idea of what they are going to do, and I cannot wait for the Bacaran to OFFICIALLY break ground! I will be down there this weekend, and I hope to get a lot of pictures
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  #189  
Old Posted Dec 5, 2007, 7:06 AM
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Have fun on your trip Rebel!


Royal could be doing the same thing that the Isle and Bayview are doing...relooking at their plans and making sure that they have everything added that they want listed before they get permission to start. This prevents extra legal fees and such for having to get it approved and then reapproved if you change anything with in your plans. Say he wants a 250 room hotel this week and it gets approved, but sees that Bayview is building say a 500 room hotel, he could want to compete more and decides he now wants a 500 room hotel. He would then be required to rego before the planning commision again. Sorry for the block of text.

I am hoping thats why he keeps pulling the tabel.
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  #190  
Old Posted Dec 7, 2007, 5:34 AM
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Bayview Casino Resort

Posted on Fri, Dec. 07, 2007
Bayview Casino moves on Casino request approved
By MARY PEREZ
meperez@sunherald.com


BILOXI -- Bayview Casino is on its way to the Biloxi City Council and then the Mississippi Gaming Commission for approvals to let construction begin on the Back Bay casino.
The developers asked Thursday to have 4.71 acres south of Bayview Avenue in Biloxi zoned waterfront, which would allow a casino on the site. "We were pleased that we passed the Planning Commission on a unanimous vote," said John Ed Ainsworth, one of the casino developers. "We were very pleased there was no opposition to it."

No one at the meeting spoke against rezoning the land from B-4 General Commercial and RS-5 Single-Family Residential High Density to WF Waterfront.

Now the developers, Bayview Ave. Development Group, Biloxi Gaming Partners and Bayview Gaming Group, hope the Biloxi City Council will quickly vote to rezone the property. "We're going to ask to be put on the agenda for the January Gaming Commission meeting," said Ainsworth. The meeting is January 17.

While the project is moving forward, "Our funding is contingent on us having proper zoning and Gaming Commission approval," Ainsworth said. The casino will be built south of Bayview Avenue along with a 600-room hotel and several restaurants. "That will all come out in the master plan," when the plans go to the Gaming Commission, said Ainsworth.

The 2.42 acres on the north side of Bayview Avenue on the Back Bay was zoned WF before Hurricane Katrina, said Bayview attorney Michael Cavanaugh. Ainsworth said the waterfront won't be developed initially but once the casino and amenities are built on the north side of the property, condos or more hotel rooms may be built along the water.

Commissioner David Stanovich asked what will happen to Dacey Street when the casino is built. Cavanaugh said the developers might request that the street be vacated or rerouted around the resort.

The new FEMA flood elevations maps make the ability to build homes in that area "problematic at best," said Cavanaugh. The best way to build in that area is with concrete and steel, he added, which is how casinos are constructed.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

In other action
On Tuesday the Biloxi Planning Commission also approved:
• Rezoning 14 parcels of land on Oak, Seventh and Eighth streets from RS-5 to B-2 Community Business for a mixed-use retail center to include a beauty shop and jewelry store with an apartment on the upper level.

• Rezoning land at Arbor Place gated community off Popp's Ferry Road to allow 88 additional multi-family residences.

• Variances for a 28,500 square-foot office building at the Biloxi Industrial Park. The 19 protected trees on the property damaged by Katrina will be cut and replaced with about 20 new large trees and a courtyard.

Last edited by BLX 101; Dec 8, 2007 at 9:03 AM.
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  #191  
Old Posted Dec 11, 2007, 4:57 AM
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Ohr�s phoenix rising again with museum

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BILOXI, Miss. � Fire and storm swirl in an unlikely tale of the rebirth of a 19th-century Biloxi art potter and his 21st-century museum.

This rare international story captures the imagination of all who treasure art and architecture � or survival.

When George E. Ohr lost his life�s work and his pottery complex in an 1894 blaze that destroyed much of downtown Biloxi, he was undefeated. The clay wizard peddled $1 tickets, redeemable for wares once the self-styled Mud Dauber was back in business.

Ohr raised $800, or $17,300 in today�s dollars, to build a pottery complex that turned Mississippi clays into both utilitarian and magical shapes that awe the modern art world. Before clearing the fire debris, he salvaged hundreds of scorched clay pots, set them on shelves that rimmed his fence and affectionately called them his �burned babies.�

Ohr�s phoenix-like rebirth inspires the rejuvenation of a museum dedicated to him. It was designed by a 21st-century architectural wizard whose work is as sensual and zany as Ohr�s ceramics. Frank Gehry�s head-turning design was beginning to take shape on the Biloxi beachfront when Hurricane Katrina struck in August 2005.

The future of the ravaged Ohr-O�Keefe Museum of Art was uncertain. The scarred, leafless ancient oaks, integral to Gehry�s �Dance with the Trees� design, were pitiful. Although Gehry�s innovative techniques allowed for hurricanes, the structures were not far enough along in construction to withstand Katrina�s fury.

Two nearly completed �pods� of the four that would comprise the George E. Ohr Gallery opened like flower petals. The Center for Ceramics stood, but needs repairs and completion. The Gallery of African-American Art was hit by a barge; the Pleasant Reed House, built by a freed slave and moved to the museum�s campus as part of the its more encompassing cultural mission, simply disappeared.

Like Ohr in 1894, the museum staff, trustees and supporters, indeed the art world itself, stood on a precipice. Rebuild? Walk away? The costs to reconstruct and finish would be astronomical and money was uncertain in the wake of Katrina.

Like Ohr in 1894, no one threw in the proverbial towel.

First announced plans were to build back with just a part of Gehry�s original design. Now, with a $15 million insurance payment and other help from government and private grants and a small but continuous flow of donations, rebuilding plans have expanded and work is again under way.

�Since the storm, the museum has used the theme �Ohr Rising� because we are inspired by Ohr�s not only coming back after the fire but creating the best work of his life,� said Marjie Gowdy, the museum�s director.

When finished, the pods will be encased in angelhair-brushed stainless steel and topped with a glass atrium that will make the pods and tree limbs seem to dance as one.

A recent pod party was the museum�s message that it has accepted a vital role in the rebirth and economic redevelopment of the Katrina-ravaged Mississippi Coast.

The grand opening for at least three of the main buildings, including the Ohr Gallery, may come as early as December 2009. Construction contracts will be awarded in January.

�I believe the mission of the museum has changed since Katrina,� said Larry Clark, trustee president and co-owner of Butch Oustalet Autoplex in Gulfport. �We now have greater responsibility to promote historical and cultural preservation than before the storm. We have the opportunity to develop a quality of life that will make people want to live here.�

When Ohr rebuilt his pottery in 1894, the region was in the midst of an economic boom from the rising seafood industry. Now, the expected boom emanates from resort casinos and repackaging of coastal amenities that have long made this a desirable place to live and visit.

The Gehry-designed museum is expected to give art an even bigger post-Katrina role.

�We feel another part of our mission is economic development,� Clark said. �The museum can bring a caliber of tourists to the Coast that will be attracted no other way.�

When George Ohr rebuilt after the fire, he constructed an unusual pagoda tower that brought the curious and was featured in post cards.

There are other analogies to the 1894 fire. The museum is peddling fundraising clay bricks that could be Ohr�s long-ago tickets, and as for the burned babies, those could easily be the survivor oaks so integral to the Gehry design.

Only one oak was lost to the storm. Remaining trees have been trimmed of hurt limbs, fertilized and their soil aerated. They still hurt, but those who understand trees see the new-growth leaves as miraculous.

�The oaks make the Frank Gehry experience here unlike anywhere else � Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, Bilbao, Spain,� said Clark.

Because of Gehry�s first impressions in 2000, the Ohr oaks will forever be in a protected dance that includes an upside-down water-fertilizing system under the terrace and buildings.

�Because of the trees, we were given the 3-inch rule by Gehry,� said Joey Crain, of Guild Hardy Architects, the Mississippi firm hired by Gehry. �We could move a surface up to three inches, but if we move it more, we have to get permission.�

As local project architect, Crain must see that all structural skeletons, mechanical systems such as air conditioning, and piers for the buildings and terrace coexist in tight spaces without compromising Gehry�s aesthetics. Modern technology made that possible.

�Arborists exposed every root, which gave us GPS points,� Crain said. �We reconstructed the root network on a computer and then we knew where we couldn�t put our 600 piles.�

Once the trees and major limbs were mapped and a scale model constructed, Gehry took snub-nosed pliers, tape and poster board and designed the buildings among the model trees.

Computer fabrications and other scale models led to Gehry�s final design. Groundbreaking came in 2003, and Gehry�s intriguing shapes began appearing.

Twenty-seven months after Katrina, 10 trucks arrived with giant pod sections - some replacements, others made before the storm but never installed. Now the dance begins again, and soon nine more oaks will be planted as future dance partners, as Gehry had planned even before the storm losses.
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  #192  
Old Posted Dec 12, 2007, 11:37 PM
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Grand Biloxi Expansion

Posted on Wed, Dec. 12, 2007
Splendors of the Orient
By MARY PEREZ
meperez@sunherald.com


BILOXI -- Today is the opening of Harrah's Grand Biloxi Casino, Hotel and Spa's new Asian gaming area and noodle bar.
This is the first major addition to the casino since it reopened after Hurricane Katrina in August 2006, said Karen Sock, the Grand's general manager.

The area is located off the casino floor next to the buffet. Monday night some of the best Total Rewards players from the Houston market were invited to dinner, and they will join today's festivities, which include a ribbon cutting and a ceremonial lion dance that traditionally brings luck and prosperity.

"It's the first room of this type in the market," said Sock. "This is a vibrant and very important segment of our business." Harrah's invested several million dollars to create the Asian bistro and gambling area with six table games, she said.

Similar Asian gaming rooms were built at three Harrah's properties in Atlantic City - Caesars, Bally's and the Showboat - and at Harrah's Lake Tahoe, said Sock. Using feng shui, the designer who worked at several Harrah's properties gave the room clean lines and high-end finishes such as Chinese terra cotta tiles and etched stone.

Abundant accents of gold, the Asian color of luck, were used in the room where guests play at the one blackjack, two pai gow and three mini-baccarat tables.

The Cuu Long Souper Pho noodle bar serves steaming bowls of noodles and rice with chicken, duck, pork and beef, along with spring and egg rolls and flavored bubble tea.

"It's a unique experience," Sock said. "I'd love for people to come take a look at it."

The table games are open 24 hours a day and the noodle bar from 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. Sunday through Wednesday and 24 hours Thursday through Sunday.
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  #193  
Old Posted Dec 15, 2007, 10:06 AM
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Website Updated

Gulf Coast Investment Developers has updated their website; I was disappointed that there is no update on the Edgewater Tower or the Shores of Paradise which had sold out prior to Katrina. Hopefully, Revelay along with Bacaran Bay will break ground within the next two months. Ocean Club is scheduled to begin construction on their second tower in 2008 as well. Now, if only Dale/Morris could update their site to give us a glimpse at Bayview and Vieux Crescente Casino Resorts.


http://gcid.biz/
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  #194  
Old Posted Dec 16, 2007, 1:50 AM
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Dgewater Village Getting 2 Eateries

Italian in early '08, Mexi-Cali after Christmas
By TAMMY SMITH
tmsmith@sunherald.com

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BILOXI --
Two restaurants, one a Biloxi branch of a Coast favorite, the other a Mexi-Cali sports bar, are slated to open in Edgewater Village.

Jamie Sablich III, co-owner of Al Fresco Italian Bistro in Ocean Springs, plans to bring the popular eatery's pasta, pizza and steaks to Biloxi in early 2008.

"We're opening our second location there," he said. "Our target date is March 1.

"We think we have a great product in Ocean Springs. The (Biloxi) location excited us - it's beachfront. And we'd like to be a part of Biloxi. We'll have the same menu, same prices as our Ocean Springs restaurant."

That includes Filet Michelle, with a crabmeat and Hollandaise topping, and tiramisu made from scratch.

"And a lot of people come just for the bread," he added.

Sablich even plans to re-create a popular feature at the Biloxi site.

"We're going to try to duplicate the courtyard location indoors, with fountain and everything," he said. The 7,900-square-foot restaurant will occupy the entire southern part of the shopping center, he said.

Nearby, Marig's Mexi-Cali Grill & Sports Bar is putting finishing touches on their restaurant. Owner John Marigliano said the concept might be new to Coast customers, but he thinks it will catch on quickly.

"The Mexi-Cali might be throwing people off. It's a blend of Mexican food with California-style burritos," he said.

It's a mix popular in Atlanta, where Marigliano and his wife, Brittany, lived - he for 13 years, she since middle school.

"We were both lawyers in Atlanta," he said. They were both defense lawyers, and the couple soon realized caseloads were taking over their time together. They moved to the Coast near relatives and began working on putting their restaurant and sports bar together.

"We would love to be open by Dec. 27," he said.

He describes the menu as "fast fresh food," with filet steak and marinated chicken among key ingredients in the burritos, which can be customized.

The sports bar will feature 16 high-definition TVs with satellite connections, a separate appetizer menu and a large beer selection.

"We've sampled a lot of beers. We plan to have eight on draft and 30 to 35 in bottles - and every Mexican beer you can think of. The margaritas, we'll have eight to nine types of tequila," he said.

"We hope, once the dinner crowd dies down at night, the whole thing can merge into a friendly, fun atmosphere for everybody," Marigliano said.
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  #195  
Old Posted Dec 18, 2007, 2:25 AM
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Mobi's oceanarium surfs Jones Park turf

By RYAN LaFONTAINE
rlafontaine@sunherald.com

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Dr. Mobi Solangi, who spent more than two decades caring for dolphins at Marine Life, is locked in a legal battle with his former partner-turned-rival, Don Jacobs, Marine Life's majority stockholder.

Solangi is scheduled to meet with the City Council on Tuesday to ask the city to allow his Institute for Marine Mammal Studies to begin exploring the idea of building a new oceanarium in Jones Park.

Word of Solangi's plans for Jones Park began circulating late last month.

On Dec. 1, Marine Life president David Lion sent a letter to City Hall expressing the company's interests in participating "with the city in its efforts to rejuvenate the tourism industry" and "exploring redevelopment opportunities."

"Whatever (Marine Life) wants to do, more power to them," Solangi said of the company that ousted him after he filed his lawsuit.

Marine Life's letter does not mention any specific plans or dates to rebuild the oceanarium, but Lion said the company is exploring several potential options.

"Whether it's a casino with a Marine Life theme or another oceanarium, we don't know yet," he said. "But with the right economic engine, we want to work with the city and do whatever's best for that area."

Solangi said IMMS, a non-profit organization, eventually wants to build an oceanarium in the park as part of an extension to the research center at the Industrial Seaway. Those plans don't include Marine Life.

"We are not asking the city to approve anything right now," Solangi said. "We are only wanting to begin discussing ideas with them."

Solangi, a marine biologist, said the institute's $3 million 12-acre research and conservation facility along the Industrial Seaway could be operational sometime in the spring.

The research center will have more than 750,000 gallons of tank space, a 200-seat auditorium and a veterinary hospital.

When it's complete, Solangi said, the facility will be unmatched by any other marine mammal research center along the Gulf of Mexico.

The group will use the facility to study and treat injured animals. The ones that cannot be released back into the wild would be housed at the new oceanarium.

Some City Council members are concerned about whether Solangi's non-profit group can secure the full funding for such a project.

And if the institute builds the oceanarium, can it afford the land lease? The small pre-Katrina bait shop in Jones Park was leasing its spot for $1,200 a month.

Councilwoman Libby Milner-Roland, who represents the area around Jones Park, said she wonders how well the proposal would mesh with the city's ambitious plans to revitalize the park.

"I want Jones Park done right; it means too much to the city and I don't care how long it takes," she said. "The bottom line is I'm not willing to locate anything in Jones Park right now until all of our other plans move further along."

While she is thankful for Solangi's two decades of dedication to marine mammals and to the city, Milner-Roland said the group would likely have to build the oceanarium in stages and whether the non-profit can maintain a stream of funding throughout construction is a concern.

"Yes, I do want an aquarium - a first-class facility - but I don't want to do anything in phases," she said.
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  #196  
Old Posted Dec 23, 2007, 5:06 AM
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Another record for Coast casinos

Casino revenue surpasses $100M
By MARY PEREZ
meperez@sunherald.com

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BILOXI --
The Coast casinos are jingling all the way into the record books, with the gross gaming revenue breaking $100 million in November for the first time.

Numbers released by the Mississippi State Tax Commission Tuesday show the Coast revenue was $104.1 million, beating the previous record of $99.1 million in 2004.

Revenue in the Mississippi River counties rose $1 million in November, which pushed the state total to $225.5 million and a record November for Mississippi.

"It's nice to continue to see that we're coming back," said Boomtown Casino General Manager Chett Harrison. "Very nice. We hope it continues."

October was the only month this year when the Coast gross gaming revenue fell below $100 million. A strong showing for November means the state and the Coast are poised to shatter previous yearly records.

On the Coast, the total revenue stands at $1.199 billion after 11 months, which is already higher than any yearly total except the $1.227 record for the 12 months of 2004. The state total is $2.664 billion. With revenues averaging $221 million for the past two months, the goal for 2007 of $3 billion is just out of reach.

Harrison said he is especially encouraged by the Coast's record because November isn't traditionally a strong month at the casinos. The casino operators are now turning their attention to snowbird season, he said. Most of Boomtown's marketing to snowbirds is done at Gulf Shores, Fort Walton, Destin and Plantation areas or Florida rather than in the Northeast or upper Midwest.

"They usually start showing up the first of January" in Florida, he said, and after a couple of weeks the snowbirds are looking for something to do besides walking on the beach. Wholesale motor coach trips to Biloxi provide three-day packages with free play and a meal.

Boomtown is spending $4.5 million to completely remodel its buffet and Harrison said his goal is to have it ready by Jan. 18 for snowbird season.

"Last year was spectacular," Harrison said, and he welcomes the cold and snowy weather that is already hitting the north this winter. "We love it. We hope a blizzard runs through the Midwest."

WEB EXTRA

For more information on gross gaming revenue, go to sunherald.com

November gross gaming revenue


Coast Casinos $104.1 million
River Counties $121.3 million
State total $217 million
- MISSISSIPPI STATE TAX COMMISSION
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  #197  
Old Posted Dec 28, 2007, 3:32 PM
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Bridge Boosts Business On Casino Row

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Businesses around South Mississippi are still impressed with the growing number of customers since the re-opening of the Biloxi-Ocean Springs Bridge. There are two lanes open and more scheduled to open next year, making the bridge South Mississippi's link to the Eastern Gulf Coast.

"Without the bridge open, it really did disrupt the normal traffic patterns here on the coast," says Rich Westfall with the Isle of Capri.

He says he is convinced that the five percent increase in gaming over the last year is due to the re-opening of the bridge.

When Hurricane Katrina destroyed the bridge, casino leaders knew it would lose customers who travel from Jackson County, Mobile and Pensacola, but now that the bridge has reopened, they say business is booming.

"MDOT has said that were averaging about 21,000 cars coming across the bridge on a daily basis," Westfall said.

He says those cars are forced to pass by the Isle, which gives the casino an advantage over its competitors.

However, LuAnn Pappas says the same can be said for the Grand Casino.

"We have seen our business increase since last year and certainly since the bridge has opened," Pappas said.

She says with the influx of traffic, the Grand can offer even more amenities to its guest. Now casino leaders can't wait to see what six lanes on the bridge will mean for South Mississippi's growing casino industry.

MDOT anticipates having all six lanes of the bridge open by the spring of 2008.

by Elise Roberts
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  #198  
Old Posted Jan 5, 2008, 12:23 AM
BLX 101 BLX 101 is offline
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Casino Row Update

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

My supervisor informed several of us this morning that the Isle should be unveiling its redesigned floor plans for the casino in the next couple of days. Hopefully a theater and clubs, which guests have been asking for, are included. Also, according to last weeks issue of the Biloxi-D'Iberville Bay Press, Yates Construction Co. should soon begin a 24hr work schedule at the Margaritaville site.
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  #199  
Old Posted Jan 5, 2008, 5:44 AM
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Red UM Rebel Red UM Rebel is offline
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Thanks BLX! I can't wait to see what the Isle has in store for us!
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  #200  
Old Posted Jan 5, 2008, 7:44 AM
Velastor Velastor is offline
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News would be good, the forum has been sorta dead during the holidays.
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