Water park eyed at ex-Atlantic Club casino in Atlantic City


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ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) — The Atlantic City casino where Steve Wynn used to make sure Frank Sinatra had enough towels may soon become an indoor water park and go-cart track.

Ronald Young's R&R Development Group said Monday it has bought the former Atlantic Club casino and plans to turn it into a non-gambling family resort. He said his group plans to invest $135 million into hotel renovations and construction of an indoor water park and hopes to have 300 hotel rooms open by the fall.

The water park will be the centerpiece of the project at the Boardwalk site that once was Wynn's Golden Nugget casino in the early days of casino gambling in Atlantic City, a property made famous by television commercials in which Sinatra slipped the casino magnate a $5 bill and told him to make sure The Chairman of the Board got enough fresh towels.

The resort, to be called Dolphin Village, is designed to appeal to families.

"We are going to complement every casino here," Young said. "People are going to love this."

He said it should take 12 to 14 months to complete the water park once construction begins.

Young said the project will feature a go-cart track where the expansive casino floor used to be. And the resort will feature a "world-class" arcade as well, he said.

If it comes to fruition, the project will mark the third of five Atlantic City casinos that shut down since 2014 coming back to life. The former Showboat casino is open as a non-gambling hotel, and Hard Rock International is reopening the former Trump Taj Mahal as a new casino next year.

R&R bought the property for an undisclosed price from Clearwater, Florida-based TJM Properties, which in turn bought it from former owner Caesars Entertainment following the shutdown. TJM will continue to hold an ownership stake in the property, Young said.

Young's partner in the venture is attorney Robert Reilert, the former general counsel for Caesars Palace in Las Vegas.

Atlantic City Mayor Don Guardian said Young brought a group of investors to the city a year ago with plans for a water park that did not come to fruition.

"However, I believe that this new location and timing are much better to assure success," Guardian said.

Young said restoring casino gambling at the site was never given a thought.

"I don't even want to say the C-word," he said.

The Atlantic Club is one of several former casino properties in Atlantic City whose use is limited by deed restrictions imposed by former owners, stating they cannot be used as casinos for a specified length of time.

The Atlantic Club was the first of four Atlantic City casinos to close in 2014.

In January 2016, a deal to sell the property to Endeavor Property Group fell through. Endeavor AC, a property company based in Ambler, Pennsylvania, had announced plans in 2015 to convert the Atlantic Club into a non-casino resort with an 81,000-square-foot, indoor-outdoor water park. Plans also called for conference and event facilities, a family entertainment center, new restaurants and retail space along the Boardwalk.

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Follow Wayne Parry at http://twitter.com/WayneParryAC

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