The fall of a gambling mecca. Smart Slider with ID: 28Smart Slider with ID: 8 PLAYBOY Android Download Suncity IOS Download About Club Sun City Casino Playboy Online Casino intends to give an extensive variety of Online betting.
A 30th Anniversary Reunion is planned for all former Atlantic City Playboy Hotel and Casino staff. We welcome any former colleagues who would like to help with the preparations for this Gala Celebration.
A planning committee is currently being formed. If you have the time, dedication and planning skills then we would love to hear from you. Please contact:
A planning committee is currently being formed. If you have the time, dedication and planning skills then we would love to hear from you. Please contact:
Renay Rogers
email: - renayhr@comcast.net
tel: #609-774-3910
or
Lois Sablich
email: phillychick1010@verizon.net
tel: #267-252-2752
This extravaganza is going to blow the lid off our last reunion in 1990! Keep the weekend of the 2nd/3rd of October 2009 open! A mansion in Avalon, N.J. is the planned party site.
More details coming soon!!!
Atlantic City, New Jersey
The Playboy Hotel, Atlantic City was developed and built in 1981 by Hugh Heffner’s Playboy Enterprises and Elsinore Corporation. Playboy already operated a casino in London and was looking to exploit the new Atlantic City gaming market.
Playboy Casino Atlantic City New Jersey
Las Vegas architect Martin Stern, Jr. had already established himself in Atlantic City with proposals for Del Webb’s Sahara Boardwalk, another MGM Grand, and Bill Harrah’s Marina (of these the Marina was the only one that was built). Stern designed a green glass tower with a three-level casino for Playboy, but had to shorten the tower from its original 33 stories to 22 after the Federal Aviation Board claimed that it would impede local air traffic.
Playboy Casino In Atlantic City
The casino suffered financial difficulties from the start, and was eventually sold outright to Elsinore Corporation. The name was changed to the Atlantis Hotel and Casino in 1984, but the property went bankrupt in 1985. Donald Trump bought it in 1989, and closed the casino to operate the property solely as a hotel named the Trump Regency. The property was re-opened in 1996 as the Worlds’ Fair at Trump Plaza, but after three years of failure, the entire building was demolished.