Caesars Invests $100 Million in Paris LV Hotel Tower Renovation

Caesars Entertainment will invest $100 million to renovate the Jubilee Tower from Horseshoe Las Vegas and connect it to Paris Las Vegas (l.) by a new pedestrian bridge, the company announced.

Caesars Invests $100 Million in Paris LV Hotel Tower Renovation

Caesars Entertainment has announced plans to redesign Horseshoe Las Vegas’ Jubilee hotel tower and integrate it into nearby Paris Las Vegas through a pedestrian bridge. The new tower will also be rebranded as the Versailles Tower.

The redevelopment will encompass a total of 756 rooms, some of which will be retrofitted with new 55-square-foot Strip-facing balconies. The standard room size is expected to start at 436 square feet, among the largest on the Strip.

“We know our guests, especially our Caesars Rewards members, love Paris Las Vegas. Over the past year we’ve made significant enhancements to elevate the destination, bringing new concepts like Vanderpump à Paris, Nobu, The Bedford by Martha Stewart and most recently, a completely renovated sportsbook,” Sean McBurney, regional president of Caesars, said in a statement.

In total, the renovations are expected to cost around $100 million—the company indicated that they expect to finish the new rooms before the end of the year, and the new bridge is slated for completion in early 2024.

“The addition of the Versailles Tower makes Paris one of the largest resorts in the heart of The Strip,” McBurney added. “The interior and exterior will be completely reimagined and transformed into some of the best rooms in Las Vegas. When it opens this fall, our guests will have easy access to the incredible restaurants and gaming options they have grown to love at Paris Las Vegas.”

Originally opened in 1999, Paris Las Vegas features 85,000 square feet of gaming space, numerous dining options and a recently renovated Caesars Race & Sportsbook, as McBurney alluded to.

“As we looked at the landscape of our properties, we saw an opportunity to make it even larger and frankly, more luxurious,” he told the Las Vegas Review-Journal. “Imagine what that would look like during all sorts of times of the year, whether it’s Fourth of July fireworks or New Year’s Eve or even Formula One.”

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