A casino in Lansing???
Some Michigan cities bet casinos would boost economy
A group called Michigan Is Yours is proposing a ballot measure to allow new casinos in Benton Harbor, Detroit, Flint, Lansing, Muskegon and Romulus; it would also allow slot machines at Detroit Metro. I'm excited about the prospect of having a new casino in Lansing, I'm assuming it would be downtown and that it would have a hotel. It's early in the process, but I don't see how there would be to much opposition to this. What do you think?
A group called Michigan Is Yours is proposing a ballot measure to allow new casinos in Benton Harbor, Detroit, Flint, Lansing, Muskegon and Romulus; it would also allow slot machines at Detroit Metro. I'm excited about the prospect of having a new casino in Lansing, I'm assuming it would be downtown and that it would have a hotel. It's early in the process, but I don't see how there would be to much opposition to this. What do you think?
Comments
At any rate, I agree Hood, I think it's an exciting prospect.
My thought on expanded casino gaming in general is that once you get too many too close to each other, you water down any kind of positive effect they may have and any kind of novelty they may have. The closer in proximity they get, the smaller they'll have to get because they'll only be pulling from their immediate urban areas.
That said, as far as architecture goes, the Knapp Center is perfect for a reusage as a casino given it's high, glass-block windows no one on the floor can see through and massive amounts of contiguous floor space per floor.
It looks like there's a new effort to bring a casino to Lansing, this time it appears to be a more locally oriented drive.
I've wanted to see a casino in downtown Lansing for awhile now, so any effort is welcome news to me. I'm especially intrigued by the idea of making the casino a gaming-only facility. That would allow surrounding business to benefit more from the casino, instead of it sucking the life out of the area like some fear a casino/resort would do. I think that a proposal for a downtown casino would get strong local support, but my question is what kind of red tape is involved in building a casino on State side of things?
It's an eclectic mix of crowd. Has it helped Detroit? Economically and Socially? Do you think it would have the same effects on the greater Lansing area, minus the population difference?
Detroit needed the big resort style casinos that offered nightlife, restaurants and shopping to supplement the casino itself. There's a perception, whether it's true is an argument for another day, that Detroit has almost nothing to offer in the way of those non-gaming amenities.
In Lansing, especially after seeing the nightlife pouring onto the streets on Washington like I did over the summer, those extras aren't as necessary. You'd just be sucking the profits from the businesses and the vibrancy from the city.
This is a story on the push for a Lansing casino. It really doesn't offer much new information, I'm still hopeful that this happens, but this effort may be getting thrown together too quickly to be successful.