The fairy-build crew have clocked back in. Lenny the Leprechaun’s on scaffolding duty, keeping one eye on the Double Wheel while three specialists get to work: Woody Elf (all things timber), Grout Bricky (brick by brick), and Fairy Mary (a touch of gold). Nail down frames, upgrade your materials, and watch those plots turn into picture-perfect homes once the workday wraps.
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The fairy-build crew have clocked back in. Lenny the Leprechaun’s on scaffolding duty, keeping one eye on the Double Wheel while three specialists get to work: Woody Elf (all things timber), Grout Bricky (brick by brick), and Fairy Mary (a touch of gold). Nail down frames, upgrade your materials, and watch those plots turn into picture-perfect homes once the workday wraps.

Bally’s Corp to Acquire Tropicana Las Vegas

Bally’s Corp to Acquire Tropicana Las Vegas

 

Rhode Island-based Bally’s Corp has announced that it has entered into an agreement to acquire Tropicana Las Vegas Hotel and Casino from Gaming & Leisure Properties Inc for about $308 million.

The agreement for the nearly 1500-room hotel, casino, theater and convention property also involves a sale-and-leaseback transaction relating to Bally’s Black Hawk, Colorado and Rock Island, Illinois, casino properties, the company said.

“Landing a preeminent spot on the Las Vegas Strip is a key step for us,” George Papanier, Bally’s president and CEO, said in a statement.

Bally’s Corp does not own Bally’s Las Vegas on the Strip. That 2800-room property at Flamingo Road is owned and operated by Caesars Entertainment Inc.

Papanier noted that Las Vegas draws more than 40 million tourists a year and said owning the Tropicana will boost Bally’s customer and player databases, unlock marketing opportunities and benefit Bally’s online and interactive business.

The Bally’s-Tropicana transaction is expected to close early next year. The company said the price for Tropicana property non-land assets was $150 million, and Bally’s plans to lease the land underlying the Tropicana property from Gaming and Leisure Properties for an initial term of 50 years at $10.5 million in annual rent.

The sale-and-leaseback transaction relating to Bally’s Black Hawk and Rock Island has Gaming and Leisure Properties paying $150 million and an initial annual fixed rent of $12 million.


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