The first new ground-up casino in Reno-Sparks in 26 years will open to the public on Aug. 30, 2022. 
Legends Bay Casino in Sparks, Nev.A rendering of the Legends Bay Casino in The Outlets at Legends in Sparks, Nev. It will open this August. (Image: Olympia Gaming)

The Legends Bay Casino — located at The Outlets at Legends shopping center in Sparks — cost a reported $120 million. It also took 15 years to build, according to the Las Vegas Review-Journal.

Half of Legends Bay’s 80,000 square feet will be dedicated to casino operations, including 650 slot and video poker machines and table games such as craps, roulette, three-card poker, ultimate Texas Hold ’em, and keno.

“It’s an honor and a privilege for us to open the first new casino in Northern Nevada in a very long time,” said a statement from Garry Goett, chair and CEO of Olympia Companies, which built the casino. “We have been working tirelessly to bring this project to life for many years.”

Sportsbook Coming

Legends Bay Casino will also feature the first Northern Nevada sportsbook by Derek Stevens’ Circa Sports. Circa has made a name for itself by laying out the red carpet for professional sports bettors typically shunned by major sportsbooks.

Its Legends Bay patrons will be eligible to enter Circa’s NFL handicapping contests this season. (The Circa Million IV and Circa Survivor each have guaranteed $6 million prize pools.)

I’ve wanted to get to Northern Nevada for a while now,” Stevens told the Review-Journal. “I just had to find the right fit. I knew right away that this was the right spot.”

Legends Bay will be Circa’s sixth sportsbook in Nevada. It will join five in Las Vegas — the Circa flagship downtown, the D Las Vegas, Golden Gate, Tuscany, and The Pass. Circa also operates sportsbooks in Colorado and Iowa and will open in Illinois later this year. Its Legends Bay Casino sportsbook will fit as many as 140 people in its 18 stadium-style seats, banquet booths, and high-top tables.

Legends will also feature a 24-hour LB Grill, a food truck hall featuring eats from local mobile dining establishments, a bar called Craft 55, and a Duke’s Steak House. (“Duke” is Goett’s nickname.)

History of a Legends

The Silver Legacy in downtown Reno was the last casino built from the ground up in Reno-Sparks. It opened in 1995. But Olympia didn’t intend for that to be the case. It acquired the land to build Legends Bay in 2006, a year after it formed. It originally envisioned opening a $500 million hotel-casino project with 1,000 rooms and possibly a lakefront amphitheater in 2008.

Then 2008 happened. Since the Great Recession, Olympia adjusted its plans several more times, mostly downward. The light at the end of the tunnel came from a closed Sparks gaming establishment called the Mint Casino.

“We found a grandfathered gaming license in Sparks that was actually movable from one location to another,” Court Cardinal, regional president of Olympia Gaming, told the Reno Gazette-Journal in June. “So we purchased that gaming license.”

Macau Gastronomy Recognized by UNESCO, Mirrors Las Vegas as Nongaming Draws Expand  Fanatics Opens First In-Stadium NFL Sportsbook at Commanders’ FedExField  Maine’s Largest Tribes Oppose York County Casino  Crown Melbourne in Money Laundering Fix as Whistleblower Video Shows Bricks of Cash at Suncity VIP Room  Massachusetts’ MGM Springfield Fined $18K for Underage Player Incidents Since Christmas  Louisiana’s L’Auberge Casino Holdup Attempt Leads to Arrest  Wynn Boston Harbor Land Deal Defendants Acquitted  Las Vegas Sands Credit Rating Could Be Hindered by Shareholder Rewards  Connecticut Governor Wants Online Gaming as Bargaining Chip in Tribal Sports Betting Negotiations  Caesars Entertainment Shareholders Approve Carl Icahn Board Members, Vote to Review Compensation Annually