Circus Circus Reno
Circus Circus Reno | |
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Location | Reno, Nevada, U.S. |
Address | 500 North Sierra Street |
Opening date | July 1, 1978 |
Theme | Circus |
Number of rooms | 1,620 |
Total gaming space | 66,515 sq ft (6,179.4 m2) |
Signature attractions | Carnival midway Circus acts |
Notable restaurants | Dos Geckos Cantina The Steakhouse at Circus |
Owner | Eldorado Resorts |
Previous names | None |
Renovated in | 1981: North Tower 1986: Sky Tower 1995: Silver Legacy Sky Bridge access, North Parking Garage |
Website | Official website |
Circus Circus Reno is a hotel and casino located in Reno, Nevada. It anchors a network of connected hotel-casinos in the downtown Reno core that included Silver Legacy Reno and Eldorado Reno and are owned and operated by Eldorado Resorts. It includes a 1,572 room hotel and a 66,515 sq ft (6,179.4 m2) casino which features free circus acts on a regular basis throughout the day over the midway which also offers 33 carnival games.[1]
It is the second-largest hotel in downtown Reno (and third-largest in the Reno area overall) by number of rooms.
Previous owners of Circus Circus Reno were Mandalay Resort Group, formerly known as Circus Circus Enterprises (1978–2005) and MGM Resorts International (2005–2015)
History
The main structure was originally built as a Gray, Reid & Wright department store which, at the time, was the only department store in the state of Nevada. Originally opened on November 7, 1957, the structure replaced a prior store location which was destroyed by a gas explosion on February 5, 1957, and is now the site of the Palladio condominiums. The new store contained 40,000 square feet (3,700 m2) of retail space and 6,000 feet (1,800 m) of storage space in a basement and 2 retail floors accessible by escalators, and had 45 departments including an electronics shop selling televisions and radios, a bookstore, record store, and wine shop, as well as a restaurant, beauty salon, and cobbler.
1977 brought about plans to enlarge the store, adding 2 additional floors, 102 hotel rooms, and a casino. The casino would have been known as Camp 14, and would have had a logging theme. The south portion of the first floor would have remained under the name Grey Reid's, but would sell only woman's clothing, and would contain an expanded beauty salon. The plan never materialized, and Grey Reid's moved to a new location in the Old Town Mall (now known as the Reno Town Mall) in July of that year. Instead, the owners were approached by Circus Circus Enterprises, the operating company of Circus Circus Las Vegas.[2] After about a year of renovations, the casino opened on July 1, 1978, about a decade after its Las Vegas counterpart, and on the same day as the opening of the Sahara Reno and the expanded Money Tree Casino. Circus Circus Reno was inspired by the gaming boom spurred by the new MGM Grand Reno, casino companies wanted to gain some of that momentum. The Reno Circus opened with a small hotel and very similar attractions to its Las Vegas counterpart.
It has three hotel towers: The North Tower, the Casino Tower and the Sky Tower. The North Tower, with 625 rooms, was opened in 1981 and has a height of 225 ft (68 m) and 22 floors. The Sky Tower, with 905 rooms, was opened in 1986 and has a height of 278 ft (84 m) and 28 floors. In 1995, extensive renovations were completed, including the remodel of the mezzanine level where the restaurants are located, the midway, and a sky bridge connecting to the Silver Legacy.
In 2008, It had planned on adding an indoor swimming pool. Until the opening of the Silver Legacy in 1995, guests at Circus Circus did not have access to swimming facilities. According to a rendering on the Circus Circus website, the pool would have been under a glass canopy, placed atop the sky bridge tram station.[3] As of July 2010, construction has yet to begin, and all references to the project on the resort's website have been removed.
The Topsy The Clown sign was designed by Gordon Tietjen and manufactured by Young Electric Sign Company.
On July 7, 2015, MGM agreed to sell its properties in Reno (Circus Circus Reno and a 50 percent stake in the Silver Legacy) to Eldorado Resorts for $72.5 million.[4][5] The sale was approved and completed in November later that year.[6][7][8][9][10][11]
References
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External links
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- Pages with broken file links
- Official website not in Wikidata
- 1978 establishments in Nevada
- Casinos completed in 1978
- Hotels established in 1978
- Hotel buildings completed in 1981
- Hotel buildings completed in 1986
- Hotel buildings completed in 1995
- Casinos in Reno, Nevada
- Hotels in Reno, Nevada
- Casino hotels
- Eldorado Resorts
- Mandalay Resort Group