The Oklahoman

Osage Casinos unveils $160 million expansion

- BY RHETT MORGAN

TULSA — The lavishness of the Osage Casinos' new $160 million casino and hotel expansion was on full display Wednesday, leaving at least one member of tribe's leadership floored.

"This has kind of been my dream," said Mark Simms, chairman of the Osage Nation Gaming Enterprise Board. "I've been on it since the beginning.

"I've looked at the plans. I saw the pictures. But everything didn't look like this. It didn't do it justice."

Several hundred people turned out for the opening of the Osage Casino Hotel, a site four minutes north of downtown Tulsa that will eventually employ at least 400 people and feature an entertainm­ent venue, gaming floor, 141-room hotel, sports bar, cafe, pool and Nine Band Brewing Co., a full-service brewery.

The complex at 951 W 36th St. North encompasse­s 247,000 square feet. It will bring an estimated economic impact of $32 million annually in wages and salaries, said Mike Neal, president and CEO of the Tulsa Regional Chamber.

It also puts the Osage on comparable entertainm­ent and gaming footing with the Cherokee Nation and the Muscogee (Creek) Nation. Those tribes already have mega-footprints in the area, the Cherokees with the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Tulsa in Catoosa and Jimmy Buffett's Margaritav­ille offerings at River Spirit Casino Resort near 81st and Riverside Parkway.

Revenues from the Osage's new casino provide the nation with funding for health care, education and cultural programs.

"The new facility here adds to gaming opportunit­ies in the Tulsa area," said Osage Nation Principal Chief Geoffrey Standing Bear. "Indian gaming has been nothing but positive for the tribes, for the city of Tulsa and for the state of Oklahoma.

"This is a big step forward in our growth and strengthen­s our ability to be self-sufficient."

The new facilities, which will include nearly 66,000 square feet of casino space, will give the Tulsa metro an estimated 366,000 square feet of casinos.

Tulsa Mayor G.T. Bynum said he went on a walk-through of the Osage Nation complex a couple of weeks ago.

"A $160 million investment in a quarter-million square-foot facility ... that, in and of itself, is remarkable," he told the crowd Wednesday. "When you hear numbers like that at a scale like that, it's easy to not appreciate the eye for detail that went into every one of those square feet."

 ?? [PHOTO BY STEPHEN PINGRY, TULSA WORLD] ?? Osage Casinos CEO Byron Bighorse speaks Wednesday during the grand opening of the new Osage Casino Hotel and Casino in Tulsa.
[PHOTO BY STEPHEN PINGRY, TULSA WORLD] Osage Casinos CEO Byron Bighorse speaks Wednesday during the grand opening of the new Osage Casino Hotel and Casino in Tulsa.

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