Philadelphia Casino Construction

 

Casino Hotel Philadelphia will debut as the second gaming hall within the city limits. Located on the south side of Packer Avenue between 10th and Darien streets, the adult playground will open with a full-service casino (including a 29-table, state-of-the-art poker room), a FanDuel-branded sportsbook, and several bars. Hotel & Casino Philadelphia, an affiliate of the Cordish Cos., which was given an extension to open the property by 2020. It will generate about 3,000 new direct and indirect construction jobs.

Dive Brief:

ConstructionPittsburgh casino construction

Live! Casino & Hotel Philadelphia, an affiliate of The Cordish Cos., has selected Gilbane Building Co. as general contractor for its $700 million development in Philadelphia's stadium district. “Gilbane was a natural fit for this project because the team is so experienced in the hospitality industry, and they bring a real understanding of our vision,” Joe Weinberg, managing partner of The Cordish Cos., said in a statement.

Gilbane will build the 1.5-million-square-foot sports, entertainment and casino resort, which will feature a boutique hotel with more than 200 rooms, dining and live entertainment venues and a 2,700-space parking garage. Gilbane will first demolish an existing Holiday Inn and other buildings occupying the site of the future Live! development.

Project officials said the complex will create approximately 3,000 direct and indirect construction jobs, and that Cordish has committed to a community benefits plan that will include small business and labor hiring goals for local residents, minorities, women and veterans. There is a planned pre-bid information session at Cordish's Xfinity Live! venue in Philadelphia on Jan. 11 from 10 a.m. to noon for subcontractors and vendors interested in participating in the project.

Dive Insight:

Project schedule documents — with Gilbane’s logo on them — presented at the Pennsylvania Gaming Commission’s November meeting gave an early hint as to the company’s involvement in the development. The presentation was part of Cordish subsidiary Stadium Development’s successful request for an extra two years to begin slot machine operations at the Live! casino and hotel venue after project delays. At the meeting, project officials indicated that demolition would start soon and that substantial completion would be reached in December 2020.
When the Live! Casino & Hotel Philadelphia opens for business, it will benefit from the nearby presence of not just one but several professional and college sports teams that play at the Wells Fargo Center, Lincoln Financial Field and Citizens Bank Park — all of which are located at the Philadelphia Sports Complex site. In fact, Cordial already has a successful retail and entertainment development in the Wells Fargo Center — the 4.4-acre Xfinity Live! complex.
Another Cordish Live! development is the $250 million Texas Live! project in Arlington, Texas, which is located between the Dallas Cowboys’ AT&T Stadium and the future home of the Texas Rangers as well as near the Rangers’ current ballpark, Globe Life Field. The new baseball stadium, Texas Live!, a hotel and a convention center represent a total investment of $1.2 billion.

Casino

Construction at the massive Live! Hotel & Casino in South Philadelphia, which continued during the shutdown based on a waiver, is now facing a closedown. It is not clear the continued project fits the terms of the exemption, according to several news organizations.

According to the Philadelphia Inquirer:

“An exemption was granted to Gilbane Construction, but that exemption does not allow for casino construction,” said Casey Smith, the spokesperson for the state Department of Community and Economic Development.

Casino construction doesn’t qualify for exemption

While all “nonessential” businesses were ordered closed, the Wolf administration allowed for some exceptions on a per case basis. Maryland-based Cordish Companies, owner of the projected Live! Casino, said in a statement:

“Gov. Wolf’s administration recognized there were many businesses in the state that should be allowed to continue operations with the proper planning and safety protocols in place. The state implemented a system for all businesses in the state to petition the Department of Community and Economic Development for waivers from the governor’s shut-down order. DCED has received over 32,000 requests and issued over 5,600 waivers to date.”

Rhode Island Gilbane Building Co. is the contractor at work on the $700 million casino. The project, originally known as Stadium Casino, includes a casino, hotel, parking garage and a related sports arena, and is going up near the stadiums in South Philadelphia.

Apparently, while some of Gilbane’s projects qualified, others like the casino did not. According to Smith:

“Per guidance, when a company receives an exemption in response to a request in which it specifically identified a particular element of the business as essential to health care or another life-sustaining operation, that exemption only relates to those specified life-sustaining activities.”

That means the ongoing construction will need to cease when it is safe to do so.

“However, all work on the project should be halted once the infrastructure stabilization work is done,” Smith added in comments to an NPR news outlet.

A labor union walked off Live! Casino site, citing ‘danger’

Additionally, a major labor union has pulled its workers from the casino project, and several other Philly job sites, according to NPR’s WHYY radio station. The other sites include the Philadelphia Art Museum and the police headquarters.

The NPR station added in an online posting:

“While some job sites have reopened in Pennsylvania via the waiver process, it is unfortunate that the general contractors on a few of these projects were not complying with the CDC regulations,” wrote Sheet Metal Workers President Gary Masino.

“Because of this, we felt that the workers on those projects were in danger, and it was decided to pull our local 19 members off of those sites.”

Masino told the Inquirer he thought Gilbane had placed his union members in “danger” by not following the CDC guidance.

Philadelphia Casino Construction

Workers have tested positive at Live! Casino

At least two workers at the job site have tested positive for COVID-19, according to the Inquirer. But rather than shutting down, workers were generally advised to self-isolate, according to the news outlets.

Many workers have left the site over past incidents, too. There was even one 15-day shutdown, according to WHYY.

But Cordish maintains that their construction contractor has followed necessary safety and CDC protocols. According to a statement sent to PlayPennsylvania:

“Gilbane, the developer, the Building Trades Council and General Contractors Association worked collectively to develop and approve work protocols that enhanced CDC guidelines. These guidelines have been meticulously followed on the casino project. All involved in the project have the same goals – to build a world-class facility while making the safety of its work force paramount.”

Cordish has said it intends to continue construction for now

According to the Inquirer, Cordish said on Monday they intended to keep building.

“In the case of the casino project, the building is still exposed to the elements and requires critical enclosure and infrastructure work to be completed before construction work can be safely paused.”

Philadelphia Live Casino Construction

The company added:

“The safety of all workers on the casino job and all construction jobs in the region is paramount.”

But Gilbane and Cordish have not commented on the subsequent statement of the Department of Community and Economic Development spokesman who said they are not following the exemption’s guidelines.

Stadium Casino Philadelphia Construction

Cordish executives previously said they aimed to open the casino before the end of the year. How the current situation and impending construction delay will affect that expectation remains to be seen.