The main hotel tower was finished in July 2007, and the resort officially opened on 28 August 2007. It has 3,000 suites, 1,200,000sqft (110,000m2) of convention space, 1,600,000sqft (150,000m2) of retail space, and 550,000 square feet (51,000m2) of casino space (with 3,400 slot machines, 800 gambling tables), and the 15,000-seat Cotai Arena for entertainment and sports events.
Its lead architects were Aedas and HKS, Inc., who were responsible for its design, coordination and implementation.[3]
Location
The Venetian is located on Macau's Cotai Strip, an area that includes a dozen multibillion dollar resorts, a private university campus, and the Macau garrison of the People's Liberation Army.[4]:43
The Venetian was built on reclaimed land and its foundation is supported by 1,530 concrete pilings.[4]:44
Facilities
The Venetian's facilities include 3,000 hotel rooms, 300 retail stores, an indoor canal, a clinic, a spa, and a gymnasium.[4]:43
Casino
The casino measures 546,000sqft (50,700m2).[5] It is further divided into four themed gaming areas:
Golden Fish
Imperial House
Red Dragon
Phoenix
The casino contains slot machines and gambling tables.
The attached hotel contains a club called Paiza Club which is reserved for premium guests. The gaming area of the Paiza Club is divided into individual private gaming rooms each named for notable Asian cities and regions such as Yunnan, Guangzhou, Hong Kong, Singapore and Kuala Lumpur.
The Venetian has a 15,000 seat arena.[4]:43 It is used for hosting large indoor functions such as sporting events like basketball, tennis, and boxing, as well as concerts and international televised awards shows. Events are held year-round.
The Venetian Macao is within walking distance from Cotai West Station on the Taipa section of the Macau Light Rapid Transit that serves the Cotai Strip and the larger area of Cotai.[6]
The Venetian also operates a private bus fleet.[4]:43
Controversies
On 12 November 2008, the gates were locked to the construction labor force from a variety of Asian countries as projects were suspended. Hsin Chong, the project manager for the Venetian, laid off approximately 400 staff. As many workers had been there for less than two years, no severance was due. The next day, Sands' president for Asia announced that up to 11,000 workers would be losing their jobs as the company was halting building projects in Macau.[7]
In 2010 the Chinese press reported that authorities had found more than 100 prostitutes inside the casino as part of a "sex-trade crackdown".[8]
In early 2011 the United States Department of Justice and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission initiated an investigation into the Las Vegas Sands Corporation with respect to the compliance of its Macao properties with the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.[8] In 2016, the Las Vegas Sands Corporation settled a civil lawsuit brought by the U.S. SEC over the allegations and paid $9 million.[9] It paid a further $6.96 million in 2017 to settle criminal allegations made by the U.S. DOJ.[9]
This article uses material from the Wikipedia article The_Venetian_Macao, and is written by contributors.
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