For FW casino boosts tourism in Michigan's southwestern corner

Search

Member
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
34,790
Tokens
chicagotribune.com

New casino boosts tourism in Michigan's southwestern corner

By JAMES PRICHARD
Associated Press Writer
12:18 PM CDT, May 24, 2008
NEW BUFFALO TOWNSHIP, Mich.

Southwestern Michigan's first casino is transforming an area long known as a pit stop for out-of-state tourists into a vacation destination in its own right.

While many Chicagoans have long enjoyed holiday weekends and summertime vacations in or near the quaint harbor town of New Buffalo, other Michigan-bound leisure travelers may be less familiar with the region. But with last summer's opening of the Four Winds Casino Resort, the enormous and luxurious gambling complex just off Interstate 94 near Lake Michigan and the Indiana border, the secret is out.

"It gives people more options at the gateway of Michigan to enjoy themselves even more when they come to the New Buffalo area," said Jerry Welsh, owner of Garden Grove Bed and Breakfast in nearby Union Pier.

Besides the casino, visitors to Harbor Country can stroll on beaches, shop at antique stores, wander through art galleries, tour wineries and discover hidden gems of restaurants. The region includes a 10-mile stretch of Lake Michigan communities from New Buffalo to Sawyer, plus the inland village of Three Oaks

The early success of Four Winds appears to be having a ripple effect on the region's tourism economy, said Pam Sudlow, who was executive director of the Harbor Country Chamber of Commerce until late April, when she left to start her own business.

Local hotels, inns and B&Bs are filling more rooms. Several new restaurants and retail stores recently opened or soon will open near the casino. Plans are being made for a 24-hour daycare center to serve casino employees.

The chamber has gotten calls from bus-tour companies and small groups planning casino trips that want to find out more about other local activities, she said.

"Four Winds is part of their visit and that's what drew them to the area, but they've wanted to stay in a bed and breakfast and do other things," Sudlow said. "Our lodging properties have been benefiting because the casino is very short of rooms."

The 3,000-slot casino, in Berrien County's New Buffalo Township, has 165 hotel rooms and suites starting at $299 per night. That's compared with the $114 basic room rate at the Blue Chip Casino Hotel in nearby Michigan City, Ind., and the $129 rate at the Little River Casino Resort in Manistee, about a three-hour drive up the coast of Lake Michigan.

Four Winds also has six restaurants and 3,400 parking spaces, said John Miller, tribal chairman of the Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indians, the Dowagiac-based tribe that owns the casino.

Business has been so strong that an expansion already is in the works that probably will add more lodging, restaurants and parking spaces.

"Right now, we're in discussions with our tribal government and our managing partner (Minneapolis-based Lakes Entertainment Inc.), and we're deciding exactly what we want to do in the next phase," Miller said.

While the casino is the first in southwestern Michigan, it is not without competition, with Blue Chip only about 10 miles away. Still, during Welsh's eight years as owner of Garden Grove, he doesn't recall many of his lodgers expressing an interest in going to the Michigan City casino.

On the other hand, an increasing number in recent months have mentioned plans to visit Four Winds, he said.

"It's something else to do on a rainy day for our clientele," Welsh said. "They're here mostly just to decompress from corporate America."

Angie Siewert, owner of the Sans-Souci Euro Inn, about three miles east of New Buffalo, called the casino "an added amenity" for her guests. But she cautioned it's too soon to know how much of a long-term effect Four Winds will have on the local tourism economy, particularly with $4-per-gallon gasoline.

"The market is still tough at the moment," she said. "I see what's happening at many inns, I talk to other innkeepers, and people are just not traveling as they used to, which is probably understandable."

Another travel option is on the horizon. Amtrak recently reached an agreement with the city of New Buffalo to build a passenger station beside the railroad's high-speed line at the lakefront. Starting sometime this summer, riders will be offered four daily nonstop hourlong trips to and from downtown Chicago. Both commuters and tourists are expected to take advantage of the rides.

Starlight Tours and Travel in Battle Creek has offered weekly bus tours to Four Winds since it opened Aug. 2, said owner Denise Kendall. Between 30 and 40 people, mostly seniors, board the company's buses each Thursday to take the day trips.

"They like the food," she said. "There's a lot of penny (slot) machines, a lot of nickel machines, and it's brand new and beautiful. All the new casinos are beautiful like that. People like to check them out."

Four Winds is nestled at the end of a scenic, mile-long driveway that meanders through a forest, and it's easy to quickly forget that it sits near a busy interstate highway. The casino portion of the complex resembles a huge, upscale lodge.

A rotunda just inside the main entrance features two giant fireplaces and the beginnings of a large, circular mural being painted by a Pokagon artist. To one side of the main promenade are several retail shops and specialty boutiques, to the other is the gaming floor itself.

The darkly lit, arena-sized chamber is filled with the ringing sounds of slot machines but with a lot less neon than in typical Las Vegas casinos. There are 100 gaming tables for playing poker, blackjack, baccarat, roulette and craps.

The restaurants are scattered throughout the casino and offer everything from buffet-style fare to fine dining, from sandwiches to sushi to 28-day dry-aged steaks.

A gambling area set aside for high rollers features hundred-dollar slots and a luxuriously appointed room for the highest of the high, complete with a private entrance and drop-off area for their limos.

"When people are here, they feel very, very special," casino manager Matt Harkness said.
 

Official Rx music critic and beer snob
Joined
Jun 21, 2003
Messages
25,128
Tokens
5team - I won't see a difference in the summer since so many Chicagoans are there already. We get about 15,000-20,000 in Harbor Country on a good weekend. So far the gas prices haven't hurt the casino, but some of the smaller towns just north have felt the pinch a lot. The high-speed rail from Chicago will really help.

Four Winds has put a major hurting on Blue Chip Casino in Michigan City. Four Winds is located right off Exit 1 on I-94 in Michigan. They advertise on all of the Chicago radio stations. They also run 8-12 buses/day from Chicago. It's in a great location, 30 minutes from South Bend, one hour from Kalamazoo, 10 minutes from my house. :103631605 I plan on some roulette tonight.

Actually been tinkering with getting in there for a dealer job or maybe starting a limo service with another person for the area to Chicago.

Actually a pretty classy place. If any of the Chicago or Detroit Rx'ers are around the area, look me up.
 

Official Rx music critic and beer snob
Joined
Jun 21, 2003
Messages
25,128
Tokens
5-team - Did you see this about the hit on Mayor Daley's summer home in Grand Beach?

Did cougar kill spark arson at Daley's Mich. home?

MICHIGAN | Fire apparently targeted Daley summer home but burned 2 others, 10 days after cops killed big cat on N. Side

<!-- Article Publish Date -->
May 16, 2008
<script language="JavaScript"> if (SITELIFE_ENABLED == true){ gSiteLife.Recommend("ExternalResource", "953616,arson051608", "http://www.suntimes.com/news/24-7/953616,arson051608.article"); }//if true </script> Recommend (13)




<!-- Article By Line --> BY NATASHA KORECKI, SHAMUS TOOMEY AND MARK J. KONKOL Staff Reporters
<!-- Article's First Paragraph --> <!-- BlogBurst ContentStart --> Mayor Daley's Michigan summer home was apparently the target of an arson that badly burned two of his neighbors' homes last month -- and was possibly set by someone angry over the recent killing by Chicago Police of a wild cougar on the North Side, the Sun-Times has learned.
The April 24 fire in Grand Beach, Mich., was initially believed to be an accidental brush fire. But police reopened the investigation after learning that a threatening note was sent to Daley's City Hall office, Berrien County Sheriff J. Paul Bailey said.
<!-- BlogBurst ContentEnd --> <!-- start sidebar --> » Click to enlarge image
New Buffalo Township Volunteer Firefighters work to put out a grass fire that destroyed two lakefront homes in the exclusive subdivision of Grand Beach on April 24. The blaze was started near Mayor Daley's summer home.
(M.B. Moriarty/New Buffalo Times/John H. White/Sun-Times)


<!-- begin poll --> <!-- end poll --> RELATED STORIES
Fire near Daley's summer home in Michigan 'vicious,' say sources close to the mayor Cops gun down cougar Anger at cougar slaying may have fueled school threat: cops
<!-- Fact box starts here --> Cougar coverage
Cougar sighting reported near CTA station
Cougar shot and killed in Roscoe Village alley
Cougar caught on tape
Cops gun down cougar on N. Side
Another cougar in the area?
Cougar 'looks at us as food'
Today's Land of Lincoln is an increasingly wild kingdom
Is another cougar on the prowl?
Anger at cougar slaying may have fueled school threat: cops
Police get call of NW Side cougar sighting
Slain cougar likely from South Dakota
Did cougar kill spark arson at Daley's Mich. home?
Fire near Daley summer home ruled as arson
Daley arson is 'about the cougar'
Daley's neighbors' house destroyed
Threat aimed at Daley's late son


<!-- BlogBurst ContentStart --> Bailey refused to release the contents of the note but said it led to the probe that eventually ruled the fire an arson.
Daley's home did not burn, but a source with knowledge of the incident said it appeared the fire was intended for his home and may have been tied to anger over the April 14 shooting of a cougar in Roscoe Village.
Winds pushed the flames to two other nearby homes, burning down one valued between $2 million and $3 million. A second home's garage was destroyed, officials said.
"It started right below Mayor Daley's house, but his house was not damaged, but it did get into the sand grasses and go over a sand dune and burn a house. Well, it was destroyed, and it burned another house partially," Bailey said.
The home that was destroyed belonged to Brad Griffith, vice chairman of the Chicago Board Options Exchange, and his fashion designer wife, Tiffani Kim.
After local police found out about the threatening note, they brought in outside investigators -- including the Michigan state fire marshal -- to take a second look at the fire, Bailey said.
Bailey would only say the targeting of the Daley home was "a possible part of the investigation."
FBI spokesman Ross Rice confirmed that FBI agents were sent to Berrien County this week.
"We're providing limited assistance to them as needed," Rice said. He would only say the matter was still under investigation.
Chicago Police are also cooperating with the FBI in the case, a spokeswoman said.
All of the affected homes were unoccupied during the fire, and no one was hurt.
Grand Beach police said a citizen first alerted them of heavy smoke coming from the Highpoint Ridge area, and the first police officer was on the scene at 12:40 p.m. on April 24.
That officer found a large field on fire, and the New Buffalo Township Fire Department was dispatched. They arrived at 12:54 p.m., police said.
The fire was apparently set on a grassy bank and spread rapidly northward toward the lake because of the winds, police said.
Ten days before the fire, Chicago Police shot a cougar after many sightings in the North Side neighborhood. Officers cornered the 122-pound cat in an alley and shot it seven times after it lunged at an officer.
Daley defended the officers' actions, ridiculing suggestions that the animal should have been tranquilized.
"I didn't see a neighbor running out and grabbing it and saying, 'I love you, oh come in the house,' " Daley said, wrapping his arms around himself in an embrace. "This is unbelievable."
The mayor's summer home gained its greatest notoriety in 1992, when a brawl broke out at an unsupervised beer party hosted by the mayor's then-teenage son, Patrick. The mayor and his wife were out of town at the time.
The mayor's father, the late Mayor Richard J. Daley, first purchased the family's lakefront compound in the 1960s. The mayor and some of his siblings continue to frequent the area.
Contributing: Frank Main
 

Forum statistics

Threads
1,108,591
Messages
13,452,743
Members
99,426
Latest member
bodyhealthtechofficia
The RX is the sports betting industry's leading information portal for bonuses, picks, and sportsbook reviews. Find the best deals offered by a sportsbook in your state and browse our free picks section.FacebookTwitterInstagramContact Usforum@therx.com