Skip to Content
Streetsblog New York City home
Streetsblog New York City home
Log In

Casinos are on the verge of becoming a standard feature of the American city. Perhaps you've heard of Pittsburgh's shiny Rivers Casino or Detroit's bankrupt Greektown Casino.

In Ohio, a ballot measure just opened the door to casinos in four cities. Setting aside the question of whether huge gambling facilities are a healthy presence in cities, is it possible to design these buildings so they fit into the street fabric well? Cincinnati's Horseshoe Casino was billed as "truly urban," but over at Urban Cincy, Eric Douglas says the reality doesn't match the hype:

The touted difference between Horseshoes Cincinnati and Cleveland and casinos elsewhere is that these have been deemed “truly urban” casinos. Well, if locating in a downtown is all that’s needed to make something urban, then mission accomplished.

false
false

“Outward facing design” is a catchphrase that was repeated throughout the design process. What does that mean? To this project it means having one main entrance and restaurants with windows and a patio, quite the accomplishment for typically fortress-like buildings. But to say the design of the project is outward facing because of the openness of only 360 feet of the entire building’s facade and at only one of the intersections surrounding the site is like saying a restaurant near the entrance of a mall is outward facing because it’s on the exterior of the building.

The view down Pendleton [Street] towards the casino would be sad if it wasn’t so tan. No pedestrian connectivity, no windows, not even roof treatment. Nothing.

While the focus of activity for the casino will be at its entrance and new lawn for the county jail, the opportunity for Pendleton lies in what happens north of and down Reading [Road].

Cleveland's casino, meanwhile, will be sited in an existing downtown historic building. But the owner, Dan Gilbert, has torn down another historic building nearby to build a parking garage. Currently, Cleveland urbanists are fighting to stop the construction of a skywalk between the garage and the casino that would allow suburban visitors to avoid venturing onto city streets at all.

Elsewhere on the Network today: Mobilizing the Region reports that New Jersey Governor Chris Christie continues to use the state's transportation funds as an ATM, transferring money to plug holes in the state's general fund. American Dirt reviews Michael Tolle's new book, Who Killed Downtown? And Free Public Transit lists the costs to society of dependence on fossil fuels.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog New York City

Queens Judge Orders City to Rip Up Half-Installed Astoria Bike Lane

The unprecedented ruling flies in the face of reams of data demonstrating the safety benefits of protected bike lanes.

December 5, 2025

Unions and Environmental Groups Push Council To Pass Delivery Protection Act

Intro 1396 would force Amazon and other delivery companies that use last-mile warehouses to ditch the sub-contracting model and directly hire their workers.

December 5, 2025

Watchdog Group Wants Hochul to Veto Bus Lane Parking Mulligan

Reinvent Albany thinks a carve-out for bus lane parkers in Co-op gives rule-breaking motorists a free pass.

December 5, 2025

Friday’s Headlines: Visionary NYC Edition

New York City stands out among U.S. cities with "Vision Zero" programs. Plus more news.

December 5, 2025

DMV SCANDAL: New York Faces Uphill Battle Getting Back Fraudulently Obtained Licenses

A longtime NYC driving teacher dishes on a pair of shocking scandals at the New York State DMV.

December 4, 2025

State DOT Hurts Cyclists in Rt. 9 Draft Plan: Advocates

The plan to redesign the spine of the river towns misses opportunities to equalize road access and safety for all travelers, according to advocates

December 4, 2025
See all posts