Casino Arizona

Casino Arizona is a casino located on the Salt-River Pima Maricopa Indian Reservation in Scottsdale, Arizona. The property is 48 feet (14.6 meters) high. Casino Arizona is independently owned and operated by the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community (SRPMIC).

Casino Arizona
Address 524 N 92nd St
Scottsdale, AZ 85256
Opening date1998
Total gaming space100,000 sq ft
ArchitectFFKR Architects
Coordinates33.453885°N 111.885493°W / 33.453885; -111.885493
Websitewww.casinoarizona.com

Casino Arizona covers 20 acres. The facility includes five restaurants, more than 100,000 square feet for gaming and a Showroom that seats 300.

History

Casino Arizona, located at the northeast corner of McKellips Road and Loop 101, opened in 1998 as a temporary structure. Originally, a poker room, the property consisted of 47 poker table games and had 240 employees. By March 1999, the property expanded to include 250 slot machines and 180 additional employees.

That same year, Casino Arizona opened a second location, at Loop 101 & Indian Bend Road. The new facility was a temporary, sprung structure. With the additional space, poker was moved to the building on 101 & Indian Bend in August 2003.

In 2010, the sprung structure and its contents were auctioned to the public. The space would eventually become Talking Stick Resort, which opened on April 15, 2010.

In September 2000, Casino Arizona at Loop 101 and McKellips Road replaced its temporary structure with a permanent building. The property opened with a Native American art exhibit, 500 slots, 50 table games, Keno and bingo. It then had 1,200 employees.

Bingo was originally offered at Casino Arizona. It was later removed so that the space could be utilized for new games that were allotted through a 2002 gaming expansion referendum. The facility reintroduced bingo in 2012.[1][2]

Gaming

Casino Arizona’s gaming floor occupies more than 100,000 square feet. It includes 998 slot machines, 50 tables of Blackjack, Three Card Poker, Keno, Let It Ride, Pai Gow Poker and Casino War. The property is also home to a Bingo Hall that offers seating for 1,000.

Attractions

Casino Arizona has five restaurants including Cholla Prime Steakhouse & Lounge, Eagles Buffet, Willows Restaurant, Salt River Café and Arizona Room Patio Grill.[3] The Arizona Room Patio Grill features a media wall with 24 screens displaying sporting events.[4]

The property also maintains an extensive Native American art collection featuring culturally significant pottery, baskets and jewelry.

Casino Arizona is located 7.3 miles from Talking Stick Resort. Both are part of the Talking Stick a Cultural & Entertainment Destination District. Surrounding companies within the District include Salt River Fields at Talking Stick, Talking Stick Resort Golf Club, the Pavilions at Talking Stick Resort and Butterfly Wonderland.[5]

gollark: However, the "trusted" bit of the name is a misnomer, in that it's "trusted" by arbitrary companies of some kind and not the user themselves.
gollark: It has some nice-for-users features like that you can, say, make your disk's contents unreadable if you take it out and stick it in another computer (without also having the TPM to do things to).
gollark: It's basically a bit of hardware built into the CPU for storing secret keys the user isn't meant to be able to access.
gollark: And similar accursed DRM schemes.
gollark: The older ones were low-powered in-order cores for phones and such, but now Atom-branded things go into networking appliances and are actually moderately fast.

See also

References

  1. "Casino Arizona's new bingo hall open for business". East Valley Tribune.
  2. "KITCHELL CELEBRATES CASINO ARIZONA BINGO HALL EXPANSION". Arizona Commercial Real Estate. Archived from the original on 2014-01-07. Retrieved 2014-01-07.
  3. Shapiro, Lynne. "Casino Arizona " the Eagles Buffet "". Yahoo Voices. Archived from the original on 2014-01-07.
  4. Sweet, Carey. "Arizona Room Patio Grill opens at Casino Arizona". AZCentral.com.
  5. "Salt River Fields at Talking Stick". Arizona Diamondbacks.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.