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SVL gaming lounge, sports betting centre for Portmore
January 27, 2010
Brian George, president of Supreme Ventures Limited.
Supreme Ventures Limited (SVL) is outfitting leased premises in Portmore for
expansion of its gaming lounge business, Acropolis, that will also double as the
operational base for its first sports betting centre.
Acropolis Portmore will open
for business "within the first 10 days of April", at the McCastle Building in
the town centre, according to SVL president Brian George.
From a capital outlay of $30 million to $40 million, George said the facility
is being outfitted as "an all-inclusive operation", providing restaurant
service, gaming and sports betting - the latter being a new venture for SVL
which the company projects will bring in US$50 million to US$100 million per
year in revenue.
Sports betting was launched by SVL last year, in a limited form, pending the
passage of amendment to the Betting, Gaming and Lotteries Act.
SVL said it chose the town of Portmore for its
third Acropolis-branded lounge - others are in Kingston and May Pen - because of
its high population numbers, which rival many small Caribbean countries, and a
dearth of entertainment facilities.
"Portmore is a
dormitory community (with) not much entertainment and, for
the most part, people have to come back into Kingston at nights," said George.
"My own view is that Portmore is a
country in itself. On its own, it is the fourth largest CARICOM country, with
about 400,000 to 500,000 people, and represents a substantive potential for
economic activity."
The McCastle building is located opposite the Portmore Mall,
between two heavily trafficked food establishments, Captain's Bakery and Grill
and Burger King.
The building is newly constructed, but has been under development for five
years.
Five-year agreement
George said that he has a five-year lease agreement with the owner that gives
SVL full control of the building.
"We had to make some compromise on the parking but right now it is adequate
and that can be addressed," George remarked.
The gaming lounge, to be outfitted with 90 slot machines along with other
multi-player games and roulette machines, will operate on the ground floor, with
sports betting at the top level.
That facility, which falls under SVL subsidiary Prime Sports, will have banks
of flat screen and plasma television sets, plus betting terminals to facilitate
the taking of bets.
But even while SVL is expanding Acropolis geographically, the company has
just completed the scaling back of the May Pen lounge, whose staff and opening
hours were cut last week, after two years in operation.
With effect from January 20, Acropolis May Pen will now open five days a week
from Wednesday to Sunday, instead of seven.
Eleven positions were eliminated, while another 37 staff members are being
redeployed throughout the SVL group, including seven to Portmore, George
said. He expects the move will save the company $10 million per year.
"We plan to implement this new branch at the lowest possible cost and similar
operating hours as May Pen now," George explained.
"The business has to prove that it can be a seven-day operation before we
consider adding operating days or hours."
Last October, SVL also closed out its Villagio Gaming Lounge at the Hilton
Hotel, as part of the restructuring of its gaming businesses that have produced
consistent losses for the company's gaming and hospitality segment.
SVL said in its last earnings report that the losses were trending down, and
had improved by 46 per cent.
For the eleven months up to September 2009 the gaming and hospitality segment
brought in $1 billion, or just 4.5 per cent of the $22 billion in group revenues
reported for the period.

The McCastle building in Portmore, to
become home to Supreme Ventures' next gaming lounge and sports betting centre.
Sabrina Gordon, Business Reporter (sabrina.gordon@gleanerjm.com)
http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20100127/business/business3.html
Portmore
Entertainment