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The Philadelphia Inquirer
The Philadelphia Inquirer
National
Amy S. Rosenberg

Former Trump Plaza Casino in Atlantic City to be imploded, officials say

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. _ The old Trump Plaza Casino at the center of the Atlantic City Boardwalk will be imploded, officials said Thursday.

The casino has been closed and vacant since 2014, and the city has long sought its demolition, especially as pieces of its facade were falling to the ground and, more recently, onto the Boardwalk in high winds.

The sprawling property is owned by billionaire Carl Icahn, who submitted a plan calling for imploding the casino and its tower by June 2021 after the city went to court seeking an emergency order. The city wants the property down sooner, Mayor Marty Small Sr. said.

Small said the plans call for a complete implosion of both towers, sparing only the parking lot and the separate Rainforest Cafe.

"The plans are for them to implode both towers, bringing the building down," Small said in a press conference outside the building. "The only thing we have to work on is the timeline."

Icahn's plan calls for the implosion to take place by June, 2021, a date that Small said is unacceptable to the city, as it's during the city's busy season. The city wants the implosion to take place by the end of 2020, or by February, in time for a full cleanup before next summer.

Trump Plaza, which then-casino mogul Donald Trump opened in 1984 to great acclaim, was one of four casinos to close in 2014, when the city's finances were themselves imploding. Two new casinos have opened up since, Hard Rock Atlantic City, in the old Trump Taj Mahal, and Ocean Casino, in the old Revel.

President Trump had no stake in the property at the time of its closure.

All nine of Atlantic City's current casinos have been shut down since March 16 because of coronavirus restrictions, but there has been talk of a reopening by July 4.

Small said the city would work with Icahn, or any future owner of the property, on developing the marquee land, which aligns with the end of the Atlantic City Expressway. He said the city would like to take over the management of the remaining parking lots.

"If there's an opportunity to get revenue, no matter how small, we're going forward," he said.

Small said initial estimates for the demolition, which Icahn will pay for, were around $14 million, but he expected the costs to be more than that for the implosion. He said public financing, which Icahn had sought, "was not a part of the equation."

Small said he was hopeful for what would replace the iconic but crumbling landmark. "It's right off the Expressway, oceanfront property, a massive amount of land, goes from the Boardwalk to Atlantic Avenue," he said.

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