Vegas in Birmingham?

Like famous casinos such as the MGM Grand, Bellagio, pictured, and Caesar's Palace in Vegas, the Genting International Casino will be open 24 hours a day.

Like famous casinos such as the MGM Grand, Bellagio, pictured, and Caesar's Palace in Vegas, the Genting International Casino will be open 24 hours a day.

Published Oct 27, 2015

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London - With its brash glitz, Las Vegas seems an unlikely role model for Birmingham.

But Britain’s second-biggest city appears to be trying to close the gap after a £150-million casino complex opened last week

Resorts World Birmingham contains one of Britain’s largest casinos, with 100 slot machines, as well as shops, restaurants, a hotel and entertainment all under one roof.

Like famous casinos such as the MGM Grand, Bellagio and Caesar’s Palace in Vegas, the Genting International Casino will be open 24 hours a day, with American roulette, blackjack, baccarat and £20 000 jackpot slot machines on offer. Almost 1 200 full-time jobs have been created on the 538-acre site by the NEC arena.

The resort, built in the shape of a cruise ship, was founded by the Malaysian firm Genting, which has similar venues dotted around the globe in Manila, New York, Kuala Lumpur and Singapore. The 12-storey building contains 50 shops and 18 bars and restaurants, allowing visitors to dine on Italian food, followed by a drink at a New York-inspired bar and finish off with a massage at an Asian spa.

Developers claim the complex is unique in offering entertainment, accommodation and shopping on the same site. They say it will boost the regional economy by £33-million a year.

The first stage of the development opened last week and the casino, due to open next week, is only one of three in Britain to have been offered a “large casino licence”. The other two are in Newham, London and Milton Keynes.

Describing the casino, operations director, Barry Clemo, said: “It isn’t Vegas but it kind of has that Vegas feel.” Genting advertise the venue as “Europe’s first resort casino”.

In 2007, following a 30-month campaign by the Mail that highlighted concerns about social damage from gambling experts and religious leaders, the British government agreed to scrap plans for so-called super-casinos.

Daily Mail

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