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Sat, 04 Jul 2009 | 00:33 GMT

Dubai gets Sin City without the sin

The Times News Service
 
 
02 November 2008
Sol Kerzner has made billions out of booze and gambling. So why is he sinking £400m into a city where they are banned?

"Is there no alcohol at all during the day, asked Sol Kerzner. "You can't get a beer with lunch?"

No matter how experienced, successful or wealthy you are, doing business in the Gulf can catch you off guard. Kerzner, the London-based billionaire casino and hotel operator, flew to Dubai last month to supervise the rebuilding, after a fire, of the lobby of his latest £1 billion resort, the AtlantisAtlantisLoading....

When he got there, he discovered that during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, hotels cannot serve alcohol before sunset. "No booze? That's news to me." Then a grin spread across his ridgy face. "Hey, what do I care? I don't drink anymore."

There are a lot of things Kerzner does not do any more. He quit his beloved scotch after checking in to the Betty Ford clinic to dry out. He has stubbed out the 60 cigarettes a day he used to smoke. He has even kicked his serial marriage habit. He and Heather, his fourth wife, have been together for almost 10 years. There's one addiction, though, that is still uncontrollable: business.

Aged 73, and still adjusting to life after a triple heart bypass and the death in a helicopter accident two years ago of his son Butch, he is about to take the biggest gamble of his career since he defied international opposition and opened the Sun City resort in Bophuthatswana, one of the independent tribal "home-lands" of apartheid South Africa.

He is sinking £400m into the 1,600-room Atlantis hotelAtlantis hotelLoading... and aquatic theme park in Dubai and spending hundreds of millions more expanding his existing One & Only hotel in the Arab emirate and is building a second One & Only on The World, a collection of man-made islands arranged in the shape of a map of the globe.

AtlantisAtlantisLoading... is the biggest hotel in the Middle East. It sits like a giant pink crown atop the Palm Jumeirah, an artificial island in the shape of a date palm. Its size and prominence mean the three-day grand opening party later this month will be attended by Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al-Maktoum, Dubai's ruler, and the most senior business executives in the region, notably Sultan Ahmed Bin Sulayem, boss of the Palm developer NakheelNakheelLoading... and Kerzner's partner in developing AtlantisAtlantisLoading.... NakheelNakheelLoading... has invested £400m.

Also coming to the "black tie 'n' dishdasha" bash are 2,000 of Kerzner's celebrity friends, including Robert De Niro, Denzel Washington and Naomi Campbell. Kylie Minogue will perform a concert and there will be a fireworks display six times larger than the one at the opening of the Beijing Olympics. The entire event will be broadcast live around the world.

So, no pressure then. Kerzner laughs: "Sure, this is by far the biggest global event we've done and the biggest-ever public party staged by private enterprise. But it does not help to get nervous."

It's not just the risk of a spectacular public failure if anything goes wrong on the night that makes the stakes so high. It's the fact that the AtlantisAtlantisLoading... in Dubai goes against so much that has made Kerzner one of the world's most successful hoteliers.

He has created his privately-held, £2 billion global hotel and casino brand by offering "anything goes" hedonism. At his biggest flagship properties there has always been round-the-clock boozing and seven-card stud. The cinemas at Sun City showed porn and there were topless dancing girls. No wonder they called him "Mr Vegas of the veld".

Step into the AtlantisAtlantisLoading... at lunch-time during Ramadan, though - the hotel "soft opened" last month - and there's not so much as a spritzer in sight. Topless sunbathing, let alone strip shows, is banned, and anyone caught gambling is treated to an extended stay in one of the sheikh's unairconditioned police cells. Can the Kerzner magic work in such a restricted market or will his pink palace crumble like a giant sandcastle into the Gulf?

Kerzner concedes that he is in uncharted territory but, sin or no sin, is sticking to his formula of offering people something they have never experienced before. "There's nothing like AtlantisAtlantisLoading... for 1,000 miles in any direction, just like there was nothing like Sun City in Africa or AtlantisAtlantisLoading... in the Caribbean when we opened there." "We're offering the first $1m-a-room resort; a water-based Disney-style theme park for all ages; restaurants by Nobu and Giorgio Locatelli for the adults. And we're doing it in an iconic building on the iconic development in the Gulf."

Kerzner points out that, with petrodollars shielding the Gulf from the worst effects of the global slow-down, the local economy is still strong. "There's no better example of growth than Dubai. Despite everything, most sectors are still expanding. The infrastructure is fantastic. Emirates [Dubai's airline] connects every big city on the planet."

He describes business at his existing One & Only hotel as "brisk". The latest figures from accountants Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu confirm that the Middle East had the highest hotel occupancy rates in the world during the first half of the year, with Dubai leading the region at 85.3%.

So far, so promising. But the timing of the launch is lousy. With consumers outside the Gulf tightening their belts, visitor numbers are set to fall. Indeed, privately, luxury hotel groups concede that bookings slumped last month and it will get worse in the run-up to Christmas.

Critics say opening a £1 billion hotel with a three-day bash whose overall cost is an estimated £40m - exceeding the record £38m that Britain's richest resident, steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal, spent on his daughter Vanisha's wedding at the Palace of Versailles in Paris in 2004 - is in bad taste at a time of growing austerity.

"It's not just about a party," Kerzner bristled. "We're establishing a multi-billion-pound project that will do good business for us and for the people who work here and be an amazing experience for those who come. "In bad times, people need to escape reality."

Kerzner executives point out that much of the bill for the party is being footed by Sheikh Mohammed and his lieutenants.

And then there is the thorny issue of religion. Kerzner is the most high-profile Jewish entrepreneur publicly to launch a joint venture with Dubai's Arab rulers, who - officially at least - do not do business with Israel. Is Kerzner concerned that local Arab consumers will boycott, rather than book in to, AtlantisAtlantisLoading...?

"It's not the world's greatest secret who I am and where I come from, but it's not really been an issue. Sultan and I have not really discussed it. And he has certainly never called me on the Jewish holidays," Kerzner joked. "I suppose it might be different if I were from Israel but I'm South African."

If AtlantisAtlantisLoading... does prove a success, Kerzner, whose 30% stake in Kerzner International is worth an estimated £700m, plans to launch a sister hotel - with his biggest-ever casino - in Las Vegas at a cost of £2.5 billion in a joint venture with the gambling giant MGM Mirage.

Kerzner and MGM have bought land opposite the old Sahara hotel on the Las Vegas Strip but, with the American gambling industry in the doldrums, Kerzner won't press ahead "until the second half of next year at the earliest". MGM confirmed the delay last week.

He is also developing a £300m casino and property development in Morocco, called Mazagan, and hopes to expand into Asia, opening the first AtlantisAtlantisLoading... there. He is going home too. After selling all his South African interests 20 years ago, Kerzner is sinking £50m into his first One & Only in Cape Town, to be followed by another in Zanzibar. "I may live in London but Africa is in my blood. To go back and reestablish ourselves there is very special."

After the British government amended its gambling proposals earlier this year, forcing him to abandon plans for a first supercasino in Manchester, Kerzner has given up on gambling in Britain. "There's nothing on the table. Gordon Brown cost me millions. I'd send him a bill - if I thought he'd pay it."

Kerzner will blow many more millions in a single night at the grand opening of AtlantisAtlantisLoading.... And the good news for guests flying in is that it will take place after Ramadan and the drinks will be flowing - even at lunch-time.

Indeed, Kerzner tried to buy almost the entire available stock of £500-a-bottle Cristal champagne, a favourite with rappers and Arab play-boys. However, Louis Roederer, the champagne house that makes Cristal, refused because, it said, such a large order would force up world prices to unacceptably high levels.

"We'll be serving Dom Perignon," said Kerzner, before adding "although Sultan and I, of course, will be on the orange juice."

© The Times News Service 2008

 
 
 
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