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'Green' casinos conserve energy, profits
- Step inside the newly rebuilt Turtle Creek Casino & Hotel and you'll find the typical blackjack tables, slot machines and loosen-your-belt buffet. But your eyes -- and nose -- may detect unusual features.
The Turtle Creek Casino & Hotel has skylights, a wastewater-treatment system and other green features.
During daytime, half the casino's lighting comes from skylights.
Drinks are served only in glasses: no cans or bottles.
Some gamblers are smoking, but the air isn't thick with smoke.
And, outside, the roof of Bourbons 72 restaurant sports day lilies, ferns and leafy hostas.
Turtle Creek, near Traverse City, bills itself a "green" casino, designed to make the lightest possible footprint on the landscape without sacrificing profitability.
Its owners, the Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians, are among a growing number of casino builders and operators interested in environmental stewardship.
Even in an industry closely identified with devil-may-care gluttony, going green makes business sense as consumers increasingly demand sustainable products and services, said Stephen Knowles, principal designer for Turtle Creek. His Minneapolis-based firm has worked with a number of tribes on casino projects with eco-friendly aspects.
The trend is reaching even casinos in Las Vegas, long criticized by environmentalists for its extravagant use of natural resources.
In April, the Palazzo Las Vegas resort became the world's largest building project to receive a Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, or LEED, certificate from the U.S. Green Building Council. CityCenter, a resort complex under construction in Las Vegas, is among at least 10 casino-related projects nationwide seeking certification.
The council has an extensive rating system for building design, construction and operation. No casinos have been certified thus far; the Palazzo's LEED certificate was just for its hotel.
Tax incentives and the prospect of lower electric bills were big motives, said Gordon Absher, spokesman for MGM Mirage, which is developing and co-owns CityCenter. "And from a social perspective, it's the right thing to do."
The 360,000-square-foot, $116 million Turtle Creek opened Tuesday and replaces a smaller casino that will be torn down and mostly recycled.
"As native people, we feel an obligation to protect Mother Earth in everything that we do," said Robert Kewaygoshkum, chairman of the nearly 4,000-member Grand Traverse Band.
Going green boosted the price of developing Turtle Creek about 10 percent, but tribal leaders expect to save money in the long run.
"The sustainability mind-set is affecting all kinds of choices, including what places you want to visit for entertainment," said designer Knowles.
For instance, in nearby Petoskey, when the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians opened a casino resort a year ago in previously open farmland, it planted prairie grass and native tree species and preserved wildlife habitat on the property, tribal chairman Frank Ettawageshik said. The long-range plan is to power the resort at least partly with wind or solar energy.
Casinos typically face a big obstacle to LEED certification: the need to satisfy customers who smoke. LEED requires separate smoking areas and systems to contain and remove smoke and monitor air quality, said Ashley Katz, spokeswoman for the green building council.
Absher said those requirements make the casino the only section of the 76-acre, mixed-use CityCenter project that MGM doesn't expect will qualify for LEED certification, despite the casino's other sustainable features.
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- Step inside the newly rebuilt Turtle Creek Casino & Hotel and you'll find th... more -
Neverland Ranch, The Casino?
Michael Jackson used to be one of the funkiest dudes on the planet. Then he became one of the weirdest.
So weird, in fact, that he had to ditch his home, also known as the Neverland Ranch theme park, and hightail it to Bahrain after molestation charges dogged him wherever he went in the United States.
It didn't help that he was annually blowing $30 million more than he took in, a crappy financial arrangement that eventually landed Neverland Ranch on the foreclosure list. But thanks to a stay of economic execution at the hands of Colony Capital Group, Neverland Ranch may skip the firing squad to live another day.
As a casino? Michael Jackson used to be one of the funkiest dudes on the planet. Then he became one of the weirdest. ... more -
Lake Mead to be dry by 2021...maybe?
Based on models constructed from the analysis of historical records from the Federal Bureau of Land Reclamation, the researchers, Tim Barnett and David Pierce, say there is a ten percent chance the reservoir will be dry in 2014, and a 50 percent chance no water will be left by 2021.
Lake Mead was created by the Hoover Dam's blockage of the Colorado River. The river is fed by snow pack from Rockies, which has been decreasing. The dam, of course, was one of the prototypical mega engineering efforts of the 20th century and a symbol of how human ingenuity could conquer any obstacle, including supplying water to a city the size of Las Vegas in the middle of the desert. Based on models constructed from the analysis of historical records from the Federal Bureau of Land Reclamation, the researchers, Tim ... more -
Monte Carlo casino up in flames
The famous Monte Carlo casino in Las Vegas caught fire today
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Reservation Roulette
Violence tears apart one Native American reservation as residents of a poor Californian reservation battle over casino profits, while another nearby reservation strengthens its community services and school system with its casinos revenue.
Brent E. Huffman's "Reservation Roulette" explores casinos and their varying effects on Native American communities. Violence tears apart one Native American reservation as residents of a poor Californian reservation battle over casino profits, while ... more -
First ever ski-BASE-jump
Shane McConkey performed the stunt as part of Bobofest '07 to benefit the Make A Wish foundation
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Casinos in Massachusetts
Do you think casinos will help or hurt Massachusetts? This story sounds like a classic example of the casino hurting the individual people who live where the casino is supposed to go. Do you think casinos will help or hurt Massachusetts? This story sounds like a classic example of the casino hurting the individual p... more
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Day At The Poker Table
This is a dramatization of how an ordinary day at the casino is sort of a trip and a big blur at the end of the day.
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Shoeshine Girl
Meet Cooper Rust, perhaps the most beautiful shoeshiner in the world.
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Joe Gets Lucky
Joe gets the 411 on how to gamble from some professional dealers in Las Vegas.
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Gambling Junkie
Gambling Addiction: Signs, Symptoms, and Treatment
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The Gambler
Yet another clip you could see coming a mile away. Kenny Rogers sings the Gambler, but for some reason there's a guy doing an interview in the middle of the clip. Oh well. You take what you can get on the internet. Yet another clip you could see coming a mile away. Kenny Rogers sings the Gambler, but for some reason there's a guy doing an intervi... more
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Hot to Beat the Casino
Idiot proof tips on how to beat the house.
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