The company instead focused efforts on six properties – Red Rock Resort, Green Valley Ranch Resort, Palace Station, Sunset Station, Boulder Station and Santa Fe Station – and its Wildfire Casino brand of small, slot machine-only properties scattered around the Las Vegas Valley. The casinos - operated by Station Casinos, Red Rock’s management subsidiary - never reopened following the statewide 78-day pandemic-related shutdown of the gaming industry that ended on June 4, 2020.
Kreeger noted that approximately one-third of the employees from each of the properties were already working at another Red Rock property, and “we hope that number will grow.” The press release also stated that the ice rink at the Fiesta Rancho will remain open. In a statement released Friday afternoon, Red Rock President Scott Kreeger said it was a “difficult” decision to permanently close Texas Station, Fiesta Rancho in North Las Vegas and Fiesta Henderson, but it would “enable the Company to continue reinvesting in our open properties and move more quickly to develop and deliver the next generation of Station Casinos resorts to the residents and visitors of North Las Vegas, Henderson, and the rest of the Las Vegas valley.” Red Rock Resorts will permanently close and demolish its three Southern Nevada properties that have been closed for more than two years, the company said Friday, with plans to “reposition the land for sale.”