Lotte Tour's new casino resort on Jeju Island aims to cash in, despite South Koreans not being allowed to gamble there
Jeju Dream Tower resort complex: Twin buildings that will be Jeju Island’s tallest at 38 floors (rendering of the finished buildings, left)
At the center of South Korea’s Jeju Island rises the nation’s tallest mountain, Halla, an icon attracting millions of visitors annually. In the centre of Jeju City, Jeju Dream Tower is rising as the island’s tallest building. At 38 storeys, it can be a new icon in Asia’s increasingly crowded gambling resort space. Making this $1.4 billion bet pay off requires that developer Lotte Tour draw the right cards in local politics, international affairs and the tricky foreigners-only casino business.
That last consideration is the joker in the deck. Only foreign passport holders can enter 16 of South Korea’s 17 casinos. The lone one open to domestic players, Kangwon Land, a 3.5-hour drive from Seoul, raked in $1.3 billion in casino revenue last year, more than the 16 others combined. Sheldon Adelson’s Las Vegas Sands and Wynn Resorts founder Steve Wynn said they would build integrated resorts on the grand scale of Singapore’s $5.7 billion Marina Bay Sands, if only South Korea would allow its citizens to play there.
“We want to be the Marina Bay Sands of Jeju,” Lotte Tour COO Lawrence Teo says, hoping to appeal to the Korean majority of Jeju visitors who can’t gamble. Its twin towers will host Asia’s largest Grand Hyatt hotel with 1,600 rooms, Korea’s biggest pool deck and a top floor observation area with dining and nightlife. Standing 169 metres, three times Jeju’s normal height limit, the towers will have unobstructed views of Mount Halla and the sea. Under the “modern Korean lifestyle” theme, Dream Tower will feature 24-hour Korean barbecue, hip takes on the Korean diner and jjimjilbang spa plus a Korean designer fashion mall open deep into the night. All told, that should amount to 3,000 jobs and, Lotte Tour says, the biggest source of taxes on Jeju.
Lotte Tour arranged a complex financing deal for one Jeju Dream Tower, to open in late 2019, with China’s Greenland Group. The Korean firm, which was born in 1971 as a separate entity from the country’s larger and better-known Lotte Group (see sidebar), is handling the cost of the other tower and the eight-level podium building.
For decades, Lotte Tour has catered to Korean and foreign travellers, including Jeju shore excursions for cruises. “We know what tourists want,” says Teo, who ran Melco Entertainment’s VIP-focussed Altira Macau for Lawrence Ho.
(This story appears in the 01 February, 2019 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)