![]() Revel’s huge cost, and its very short lifespan, has unsurprisingly received lots of attention, but its closing is just the latest sign of trouble in Atlantic City-the Showboat will close on August 31st, Trump Plaza calls it quits on September 16th, and the Atlantic Club shuttered in January. The casino will close the day after, which will put over 3,000 people out of work. That date has already been moved up-the hotel will now close on September 1st, Labor Day. The casino’s parent company recently announced that they weren’t able to find a buyer for the bankrupt complex and that Revel’s last day would be September 10th. In its short two-and-a-half year lifespan, the casino never turned a profit. “I am really hoping that we are successful.” In mid-August, we learned that they were not. “It’s more of an urban development plan than a typical casino plan,” Revel CEO Kevin DeSanctis told AN. At the time, the glassy $2.4 billion complex, designed by Arquitectonica and BLT Architects, was expected to be a transformative property for the iconic boardwalk that offered gambling, convention space, and entertainment. Two years ago, AN visited the newly-opened Revel Casino in Atlantic City.
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