The Sentinel-Record

Guitars oust minarets as Hard Rock redoes Taj Mahal casino

- WAYNE PARRY

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — Donald Trump, domes and minarets are out.

Rock ‘n’ roll and guitars — lots of guitars — are in as the Hard Rock chain re-does Atlantic City’s former Trump Taj Mahal casino.

The company owned by Florida’s Seminole Indian tribe on Wednesday unveiled its $375 million plan for the shuttered casino resort, which it bought last month from billionair­e investor Carl Icahn, and plans to reopen by summer 2018.

It will draw on the world’s largest collection of music memorabili­a to help brand the new resort, with a decided New Jersey slant.

Few things are more New Jersey than the mob and Bruce Springstee­n, and Hard Rock rolled out someone who embodies both to help reintroduc­e the resort. Steven Van Zandt of Bruce Springstee­n’s E Street band and “Sopranos” TV fame, said he’ll periodical­ly broadcast his radio show, “Little Steven’s Undergroun­d Garage” from there, and will help organize beach concerts.

“It’s a timeless place where you can come, and for the younger generation­s that feel like they missed the rock ‘n’ roll era when it first came along, we make sure that they get the experience,” said Van Zandt, who plays guitar with Springstee­n and portrayed mobster Silvio Dante on the HBO mob series. “The spirit of rock ‘n’ roll is still alive; you didn’t miss it.”

Now-President Donald Trump built the Taj Mahal in 1990, but lost control of it and two other Atlantic City casinos in a series of bankruptci­es that happened before Icahn scooped it up last year from yet another bankruptcy. Icahn shut the casino in October after a crippling strike that sought to restore workers’ health insurance and pension benefits that were eliminated in bankruptcy court.

Its literally over-the-top decor of Indian-inspired domes and minarets soon will be a thing of the past; the purple carpet that Trump loved was ripped out long ago.

“There will not be one — and underscore the word ‘one’ — piece of design, architectu­re, minaret or anything left over from the Taj Mahal,” Hard Rock CEO Jim Allen said. “We are removing it all.”

It its place will be items from the world’s largest music memorabili­a collection. Hotel guests will even be lent Fender electric guitars to play in their rooms.

Republican Gov. Chris Christie, whose administra­tion seized Atlantic City’s assets and major decision-making power

last November, said Hard Rock’s investment in Atlantic City shows that the state’s tough love is working in the cash-strapped city.

“Hard Rock’s willingnes­s to come in and invest in Atlantic City shows you that they appreciate the hard things that have been done to restructur­e the city and make it a place where investing makes sense,” Christie said.

Since the takeover, Christie’s administra­tion has negotiated a tax settlement with the Borgata casino that will save the city nearly $100 million. It also is seeking drastic cuts to the police and fire department­s.

Others feel that recent encouragin­g developmen­ts such as the Hard Rock purchase, the planned reopening of the former Atlantic Club casino as a water park, and the rebirth of the former Showboat casino as a non-gambling hotel, are due more to market forces in a less competitiv­e environmen­t than to anything Christie has done.

Allen resisted getting drawn into a political debate, but he did say that if Atlantic City had declared bankruptcy — something that loomed as a real threat before the state takeover — Hard Rock would not have invested there.

Assemblyma­n Chris Brown, a fellow Republican, was less reticent.

“Tell me something the governor has done” to make Atlantic City better, he said. “Off the top of my head, I can’t think of anything.”

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