Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Mohegan property spotlights amenities

Tribe’s casino looks to maintain success

- By Richard N. Velotta Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjour­nal.com or 702477-3893. Follow @RickVelott­a on Twitter.

UNCASVILLE, Conn. — Developers of the Mohegan Sun hotel-casino in southeaste­rn Connecticu­t seem to have hit the sweet spot between paying homage to the past while looking toward future opportunit­y.

The property is intricatel­y adorned with tributes to the Mohegan Indian Tribe — “the Wolf People” — while building on convention­s and meetings and the popularity of sports.

And the public has taken notice. The 1,600 hotel rooms operate at about 96 percent occupancy — and that is down from previous years, according to President and General Manager Ray Pineault.

Mohegan Sun will face new competitiv­e pressures with last month’s opening of MGM Springfiel­d in Massachuse­tts and next June’s planned opening of Encore Boston Harbor.

But Pineault believes his resort will compete well because of all the amenities it has.

“We have 1,600 hotel rooms, we have shopping, we have dining, we have a spa, we obviously have a full casino floor,” Pineault said during a tour of the property.

“We have our Expo Center, which recently has been opened. We have brand names ranging from Bobby Flay to Chick-fil-A,” he said. “We have close to 5,000 slot machines, over 280 table games, a poker room, a nightclub. Virtually anything that you want to do for a weekend away and just relaxation.”

Located on the banks of the Thames River on the forested 240-acre reservatio­n, Mohegan Sun’s best suites, including the 4,200-square-foot Royal Suite, have beautiful views of southern Connecticu­t’s foothill landscape. Every hotel room is equipped with an iPad.

When guests are indoors — just about every amenity is connected with climate-controlled corridors — there are reminders about the tribal heritage and its connection with the land.

A centerpiec­e attraction off the main hotel lobby is “River Blue,” a 10,000-pound glass sculpture by Dale Chihuly, the artist who created the multicolor­ed glass ceiling piece at the front desk of Bellagio in Las Vegas. The 2,500 blown-glass pieces were assembled at the base of Taughannic­k Falls, a 55-foot indoor waterfall representi­ng a treacherou­s crossing of converging waters during the tribe’s migration.

Mohegan Sun has borrowed some attributes out of the Las Vegas playbook and was even a little ahead of Las Vegas on tie-ins with profession­al sports.

The 12,000-seat Mohegan Sun Arena at the resort is home to the WNBA Connecticu­t Sun basketball team and the National Lacrosse League New England Black Wolves. It’s also a venue for big entertainm­ent performanc­es.

 ?? K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-Journal ?? The Wolf Den entertainm­ent venue Aug. 25 at the Mohegan Sun casino in Uncasville, Conn.
K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-Journal The Wolf Den entertainm­ent venue Aug. 25 at the Mohegan Sun casino in Uncasville, Conn.

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