The mini-casino will occupy the site of the former Macy’s in Nittany Mall in College Township

Bally's first Pennsylvania casino sets location

Nittany Mall in College Township is about four miles from Penn State. The Macy’s location closed in 2020.
2021-03-05
Reading time 1:29 min
College Township officials received this week a local impact report as required by the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board that identified the location for the category 4 casino. The $120-million casino will be developed with real estate and private equity investor Ira Lubert. Construction is slated to begin later this year and take one year.

An official location has been assigned for the new Bally’s mini-casino near Penn State’s campus that was announced in January.

The casino, for which construction is slated to begin later this year pending regulatory approvals and take one year, will occupy the site of the former Macy’s in Nittany Mall in College Township. That location is about four miles from Penn State. The Macy’s location at Nittany Mall closed in 2020.

College Township officials received this week a local impact report as required by the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board that identified the location for the category 4 casino, township Manager Adam Brumbaugh said in a statement on Wednesday afternoon.

In January, Bally’s, along with former Penn State trustee and real estate and private equity investor Ira Lubert, announced it would develop a $120-million casino “within a 15-mile radius of Unionville Borough” and near Nittany Mall. This will be the first Bally’s location in Pennsylvania.

The College Township local impact report stated: “Tax revenues to the Township from the casino will be a significant net positive to the Township budget.”

According to Bally’s, the Category 4 mini-casino will feature up to 750 slot machines and 30 table games, along with a sportsbook, a restaurant and entertainment facilities.

In September, the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board announced that Lubert beat out one other bidder for the Category 4 license with a $10 million bid, according to the Associated Press. Lubert was elected as the chairman of the Penn State Board of Trustees in 2016. He’s previously been involved in the development of casinos in Pittsburgh and Valley Forge.

“I am excited to have Bally’s as our partner to complement our vision, industry experience and financing capabilities,” Lubert said in a January news release from Bally’s. “Together, I believe we will make this transformative project successful for all stakeholders and look forward to the positive impact the redevelopment will have on the community.”

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