But Station CEO Frank Fertitta III and brother – and fellow board member – Lorenzo Fertitta were good and ready to pull the trigger when Las Vegas rebounded from the Covid-19 pandemic, and as their company rode the crest of the recovery. Station has held the land (formerly “Rhodes Ranch”) for more than 20 years, and the project has moved on and off the front burner more times than it would be possible to remember.
But Durango Casino is its first big one in well over a decade. That’s a long time for Station Casinos to be inactive, and it’s done some small projects here and there. The $750 million locals resort is Station’s first large-scale development since flagship Red Rock Resort in 2006 and Aliante Station, which bowed on the eve of the Great Recession of 2008. One year from the time you read this, Station will have opened Durango Casino & Hotel, ticketed for a December 2023 debut. It has projects in various stages of incubation: at the Inspirada master-planned resort in Henderson, Nevada, up at Skye Canyon, at the Tule Springs development in North Las Vegas, and just next door to Michael Gaughan’s South Point, at the southern terminus of the Las Vegas Strip. The company and its parent corporation, Red Rock Resorts, has resolved to double its presence in the Las Vegas Valley by 2030, a presence built up over the past 47 years. Fast-moving Station Casinos remakes its image yet again with Durango Casino & Hotel.