"The Harrah's casino that began here as a glorified slots shack is today a full-service, year-round attraction where change is ongoing, especially these days. A five-year, $633 million expansion is nearing completion, with new projects opening every several months.
Haven't been there in six months? Despite the familiar sounds - the ping and whir of electronic gaming machines, the bustle of construction - it's a different and bigger game.
The casino, which opened in 1997 as a one-story affair on the banks of Soco Creek, is today the major player in area tourism - an ever-expanding enterprise with three high-rise hotel towers and about 41/2 acres of gaming rooms. While other destinations across the Southeast froze or withered during the recession, the casino complex continued to expand and renovate; its current push is slated to wrap up next year.
Luck has little to do with it. Harrah's, the gambling chain that runs the operation for the Eastern Band of the Cherokee Nation, always plays by the numbers."
Get the Story:
Major wager in Cherokee
(The Charlotte Observer 6/10)
Related Stories:
Eastern Cherokees mark first phase of
$650M casino plan (5/24)
Advertisement
Tags
Search
More Headlines
Catawba Nation continues work on controversial casino in North Carolina
Gaming initiatives backed by tribal corporation faces uncertain future
Chuck Hoskin: Renewed gaming compacts ensure a brighter future for Oklahoma
Republican governor suffers another setback in dealings with tribes in Oklahoma
Cronkite News: Gila River hotels, casinos close for two weeks after worker death
Cronkite News: Curfew curtailing casinos? Don’t bet on it, owners say
'We are thrilled': Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe hails victory for sovereignty
Tribes sue Trump administration after being excluded from coronavirus relief program
Donovan White: Standing up for Native Americans and Native American jobs
'Finally': Tribal gaming in line for coronavirus relief amid stiff competition for resources
Oregon tribes’ primary engines – casinos – stalled by COVID-19
Gaming initiatives backed by tribal corporation faces uncertain future
Chuck Hoskin: Renewed gaming compacts ensure a brighter future for Oklahoma
Republican governor suffers another setback in dealings with tribes in Oklahoma
Cronkite News: Gila River hotels, casinos close for two weeks after worker death
Cronkite News: Curfew curtailing casinos? Don’t bet on it, owners say
'We are thrilled': Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe hails victory for sovereignty
Tribes sue Trump administration after being excluded from coronavirus relief program
Donovan White: Standing up for Native Americans and Native American jobs
'Finally': Tribal gaming in line for coronavirus relief amid stiff competition for resources
Oregon tribes’ primary engines – casinos – stalled by COVID-19
Indian Gaming Archive