Oaklawn Casino Hot Springs Arkansas

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Oaklawn Racing & Gaming in Hot Springs says it will add a new hotel and events center as part of a $100 million expansion.

Louis A. Cella, Oaklawn president, said Monday that construction will begin soon on a seven-story, 200-room luxury hotel that will feature track-side rooms, a resort and spa, a multipurpose events center and more. The work will also add 28,000 new square feet of gaming space.

The project is expected to be completed by the end of 2020. Work will start in May after the 2019 racing season ends.

Cella said the expansion is the largest in Oaklawn's history and 'one of the largest investments in the hospitality industry in the history of Arkansas.'

Gov. Asa Hutchinson also spoke at a news conference announcing the expansion. He thanked Oaklawn for the dedication to strengthening Arkansas' tourism industry, and noted that no state incentives were used to secure the work.

'I am very proud of the fact that Arkansas does have a thoroughbred racing venue that is second to none,' Hutchinson said. 'And we want to continue that and build on that.'

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Steve Arrison, CEO of Visit Hot Springs, said the expansion will have a positive ripple effect on the rest of the community. He said Oaklawn's announcement was like an early Christmas present.

'They're not only going to get bigger, they're going to get better,' he said.

Check back for updates and read Tuesday's Arkansas Democrat-Gazette for full details.

This rendering shows another angle of a planned $100 million expansion at Oaklawn Racing & Gaming.

HOT SPRINGS -- The owner of Oaklawn Racing & Gaming on Monday announced a plan to spend more than $100 million the next two years to build a 200-room hotel and expand its casino by 28,000 square feet.

The $100 million project will be one of the state's largest-ever private investments in the hospitality and tourism industry, Louis Cella, president of the Oaklawn Jockey Club and owner of the track, said during a news conference near the track's paddock area. About 200 people, mainly a variety of state and local officials and others involved in the hospitality industry, attended the event.

Oaklawn officials had previously announced a change to the thoroughbred track's 2019 racing season. Its 60-day meet for live racing will open Jan. 25, a couple of weeks later than usual, and close on May 4, the day of the Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky.

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Cella called the project 'a new chapter' in Oaklawn's 114-year history, its third expansion since 2008, and a boost to Oaklawn's place in thoroughbred racing nationwide and to Hot Springs as a 'premier tourism destination.'

Cella said the project has been planned for four years and would have happened without voters' passage earlier this month of a constitutional amendment allowing casino gambling. The amendment allows casinos at the state's two racetracks -- Oaklawn and the Southland Gaming and Racing greyhound track in West Memphis -- and a casino in Pope and Jefferson counties.

The project includes:

• A 7-story, 200-room hotel with an outdoor pool, luxury spa, a restaurant and two 'presidential' suites. Rooms on one side of the hotel will have a view of the track's finish line; those on the other side will have a view of the Ouachita Mountains to the south.

• A 14,000-square-foot event center, with a capacity for about 1,500 people for concerts, meetings, banquets and weddings.

• Another 28,000 square feet will be added to the casino that abuts Oaklawn's south end, with a new restaurant and food court.

Construction will start right after the track's live racing season concludes May 4, Wayne Smith, Oaklawn's general manager, said. The expanded casino should be complete by January 2020, with the hotel and events center completed by late 2020.

Smith said more than 400 people will be hired full time when the project is complete. About 2,300 people will be involved in the construction, he said.

Construction won't interfere with actual operations of the gaming center or the racetrack except for some detours getting in and out of the facilities, he said.

Arkansas

Although it has opposed similar gambling initiatives in the past, Oaklawn officially stayed neutral on the ballot initiative approved by voters by a margin of 54 percent to 46 percent.

Gov. Asa Hutchinson said Oaklawn officials came to his office in October to discuss their plans. 'This investment would have happened without Issue 4,' Hutchinson said, referring to the measure approved by voters. 'I can't take credit, because this is a private investment, but I still get to celebrate it,' he said.

No state money or incentives are part of the project, he said.

Hutchinson said some 1,500 people work at Oaklawn during the horse-racing season. 'That's a 200-million economic impact,' he said.

Steve Arrison, chief executive officer of the Hot Springs Advertising and Promotion Commission, said Oaklawn's expansion will have a positive 'ripple effect' on the rest of Hot Springs' restaurants, hotels, museums and other attractions. Oaklawn's event center, will complement, not compete with, the city's downtown convention center, Arrison said.

Smith, the track's general manager since March 2017, said Oaklawn will eventually increase its purses. The addition of a turf track also is possible, he said.

The gaming amendment approved by voters also allows wagering on sports, but Oaklawn officials said Monday they weren't ready to address that issue.

The Arkansas Racing Commission also still must issue rules and regulations for the casino amendment.

Oaklawn named HGB Design of Memphis as the architect for the expansion and Flintco Construction of Springdale as the contractor.

Oaklawn Casino Hot Springs Arkansas

In August, state Department of Finance and Administration officials projected the state would receive $36 million less a year in fiscal 2020 and 2021 and then $14 million less in fiscal 2022 under Issue 4.

They attributed the projected revenue drop to two factors: Oaklawn Racing and Gaming in Hot Springs and Southland Gaming and Racing in West Memphis being taxed at a lower rate; and the assumption that the two other casinos wouldn't open until fiscal 2022.

A study commissioned by Driving Arkansas Forward, the group behind getting the casino issue on the ballot, projected that 3,000 new jobs would be created in the gaming industry, with a similar number employed indirectly, if the measure passed. The study projected an increase of $5.8 billion in the state's gross domestic product over the next decade.

Oaklawn Racing & Gaming Hot Springs Ar

Photo by Richard Rasmussen
Oaklawn Jockey Club President Louis Cella announces a $100 million expansion plan for Oaklawn Racing & Gaming on Monday in Hot Springs.

A Section on 11/20/2018