Historia Del Casino Agua Caliente Tijuana

Historia Del Casino Agua Caliente Tijuana 3,5/5 7114 votes
Neighborhood of Tijuana
Location within Central Tijuana
Coordinates: 32°30′34″N116°59′35″W / 32.50944°N 116.99306°WCoordinates: 32°30′34″N116°59′35″W / 32.50944°N 116.99306°W
ZIP Code
Area code(s)664

Agua Caliente is a historic entertainment center and present-day district of Tijuana, Baja California, at the southeastern end of the Centro borough. The Agua Caliente Tourist Complex formed in the late 1920s along Agua Caliente Boulevard when a road was built that led from the historic Rio Zone to a natural hot springs two miles up the Tijuana River Valley. Paramount icons of Tijuana developed in Agua Caliente such as the Agua Caliente Casino and Hotel and the Agua Caliente Racetrack. Today Agua Caliente is one of Tijuana's paramount tourist centers, the location of some of the city's most affluent neighborhoods, and also contains commercial and other offices along Boulevard Agus Caliente.

Agua Caliente is a historic entertainment center and present-day district of Tijuana, Baja California, at the southeastern end of the Centro borough.The Agua Caliente Tourist Complex formed in the late 1920s along Agua Caliente Boulevard when a road was built that led from the historic Rio Zone to a natural hot springs two miles up the Tijuana River Valley. Agua Caliente is a historic entertainment center and present-day district of Tijuana, Baja California, at the southeastern end of the Centro borough.The Agua Caliente Tourist Complex formed in the late 1920s along Agua Caliente Boulevard when a road was built that led from the historic Rio Zone to a natural hot springs two miles up the Tijuana River Valley. Complemento del casino agua caliente, que hasta fecha en curso esta permanence en el mismo lugar, fue colocada frente a la puerta principal de uno de los hotels mas lujosos y famosos en su epoca. Donde cerca de ahi fue construido un hipodromo y y un club de golf, esta fuente viendose plasmada para causar una Buena impression ante todo el public. Casino caliente is more than one! Just to make sure that everyone knows casino caliente has more than one location and the safest is the one by the Greyhound track,some of the others are full of suspicious people specially the one on Ave revolution and the carrusel location. En el anverso: 'Un aspecto del Gran Casino 'El Agua Caliente Tijuana B. En el reverso: '51'.

History[edit]

The hot springs around which the Agua Caliente Tourist Complex grew was a well known location and prior to major development, was the site of small hotels and cabins. With the development of the casino and resort in 1928, Agua Caliente developed as a premier tourist attraction that drew the likes of Charles Chaplin, Rita Hayworth, and Laurel and Hardy.[2] The resort was designed in a Mexican and Californian colonial style, fitted with gardens, its own airstrip, bungalows, minarets, baths, and the casino and hotel itself. The Agua Caliente Club was a golf course adjacent to the city that later became the Tijuana Country Club. In 1930 the golf course had its first PGA Tour event at the Agua Caliente Open, won by Gene Sarazen.[3]

The Agua Caliente Racetrack was constructed one year later in 1929 and was the site of the Agua Caliente Handicap. The race attracted wealthy Southern Californians and was the richest race in North America.[4][5] In 1935, then Mexican President Lázaro Cárdenas outlawed gambling and the resort was closed. The resort was converted into a technical school and the site gradually fell into a state of disrepair as the resort furnishings were stripped away. Though the race track continued to operate, gambling was not legalized until 1938.

In 1971 the original structure of the racetrack was destroyed in a fire. It was later repaired and continues operation today, though horse racing has been replaced with Greyhound Racing, as the Racetrack of Agua Caliente (Spanish: Hipódromo de Agua Caliente). Plaza Aguacaliente & Grand Hotel Tijuana are a set of twin towers built adjacent to the Tijuana Country Club, constructed in 1982. It was the first major complex built in Agua Caliente after the original Tourist Complex. The early 2000s saw the establishment of Estadio Caliente on the grounds of the racetrack, though the stadium does not interfere with races. The development of the stadium brought Club Tijuana to the city, its first professional association soccer team.

Agua Caliente today[edit]

In the contemporary era Agua Caliente is one of Tijuana's most developed districts.[6] Along with Avenida Revolucion, it is one of the city's tourist centers and is the site of luxury hotels and numerous shopping centers. It is the city's primary athletic center being home to the only golf course in the city,[7]Auditorio Fausto Gutierrez Moreno, Estadio Caliente, and the Agua Caliente Race Track.

Commercial area / edge city[edit]

Part of Agua Caliente along Boulevard Agua Caliente functions as an extension of the city's main commercial district, the Zona Río. The Agua Caliente submarket had, in 2016, 25,043 square metres (269,560 sq ft) of class A and B office space, while the contiguous Zona Río submarket had 111,059 square metres (1,195,430 sq ft), for a total of 136,102 square metres (1,464,990 sq ft).[8] As such, the contiguous Zona Río/Agua Caliente area can be considered an edge city, that is a primary commercial area outside of a traditional downtown.[9]

Notable landmarks[edit]

Casino
The Minaret
  • The Minaret (Spanish: El Minarete)

Major buildings on or in Agua Caliente[edit]

Agua

Corporate presence[edit]

The following companies have corporate presence in the area:

References[edit]

Historia Del Casino Agua Caliente Tijuana Hoy

  1. ^ ab[1] Data for the Marina district
  2. ^'Agua Caliente & 'the Boulevard': Casino, Hotel, Hotspring Baths, Dog&Horse Racetracks, Golf Course, Airport...' Daniel Charles Thomas. Retrieved August 17, 2011.
  3. ^'1930 - The Year in Golf'. Archived from the original on October 16, 2011. Retrieved August 17, 2011.
  4. ^'Book Review: The Agua Caliente Story: Remembering Mexico's Legendary Racetrack'. About.com - Part of the New York Times Company. Archived from the original on July 20, 2011. Retrieved August 17, 2011.
  5. ^'The Agua Caliente Story: Remembering Mexico's Legendary Racetrack'. The Eclipse Press. Archived from the original on September 29, 2011. Retrieved August 17, 2011.
  6. ^'City Walls: Types of Socialization and Estates - Closed in Tijuana'. College of the Northern Border. Retrieved August 17, 2011.
  7. ^'Tijuana course offers refuge from a Mexican urban jungle'. WorldGolf.com. Retrieved August 17, 2011.
  8. ^Reporte de Mercado de Oficinas: Tijuana (Tijuana office market report)(PDF). Colliers International. November 2016.
  9. ^Chapter 11: 'The List: Edge Cities Coast to Coast' in Garreau, Joel (1991). Edge City: Life on the New Frontier. Anchor Books. pp. 425–438. ISBN0-385-42434-5.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Agua_Caliente,_Tijuana&oldid=963614471'
A brief history of the 'Monte Carlo en Tijuana' (and its fate) which opened in 1928

An orquesta típica serenaded diners at Tijuana’s Agua Calinente Hotel and Casino in 1928. Photo: Guy Sensor Landscape Photo, courtesy of San Diego History Center Photo Archive.

Historia Del Casino Agua Caliente Tijuana Mexico

The Tijuana Agua Caliente Hotel and Casino

Historia Del Casino Agua Caliente Tijuana Mex

by Will Chandler

Built by three American sports promoters at a cost of over $1.5 million, Tijuana’s legendary Agua Caliente Hotel and Casino opened to the public on June 23, 1928. The enterprise was a spectacular success, thanks in part to its brilliantly staged development. A year’s advance press notices for the hotel were stoked by Caliente’s Phase 1 construction of a greyhound racetrack. The track opened on July 1, 1927, with record-breaking purse payouts that drew the racing sports world to Tijuana.

Known as the “Border Barons,” Caliente’s developers were Wirt G. Bowman (1874-1949, cattle rancher, capitalist and politician), James N. Crofton (1895-1968, rancher and sportsman)—both from Nogales, Arizona—and Baron H. Long (1883-1962, sports promoter and U.S. Grant Hotel owner). Bowman’s long friendships with northern Mexico’s politicians enabled rapid progress in Tijuana. Caliente’s contractor was Fernando F. Rodríguez, brother of northern Baja’s military commander and governor, Abelardo L. Rodríguez (1889-1967).

Named for its medicinal hot springs, the Agua Caliente resort complex included a therapeutic pool and spa, but its chief attractions for wealthy Americans were its luxurious gambling casino, greyhound races and elegant full-service cocktail bars. None of these entertainments were legal in California, and the resort’s location, less than three miles from the international border, was made even more accessible by transborder train service from San Diego to Caliente, and by twice-daily 12-passenger Ford Trimotor airplane flights from
Los Angeles and San Diego to its own airfield.

The hotel’s 300 guest rooms, private bungalows, lush gardens and superb food service guaranteed its popularity as a Hollywood getaway. Guests at the opening’s formal dinner included Al Jolson, Dolores del Rio, Charlie Chaplin, Sid Grauman, Raoul Walsh, Renée Adorée, Mabel Normand, Lupe Vélez, Jack Dempsey and United Artists’ president Joseph Schenck, who became the resort’s majority stockholder in 1932.

Surprisingly, the famously beautiful hotel was designed by fledgling architect Wayne D. McAllister (1907-2000) and his wife Corinne Fuller McAllister (1905-2001), better known for their midcentury-modern projects. Reported monthly casino and track receipts of $500,000 paid for rapid expansions of the hotel, a grass golf course, and, in 1929, a new $2.5 million racetrack and grandstand.

Even after the 1929 stock market crash, Caliente seemed destined for long-term success. Its pinnacle of glamor came with the Warner Bros. musical In Caliente, released May 25, 1935, and starring Dolores Del Rio and Pat O’Brien. But on July 20, incoming Mexican president Lázaro Cárdenas permanently revoked all gambling casino licenses, and the resort, then valued at $8 million, was abruptly forced to close at the height of its fame. The Caliente track was allowed to reopen, but the hotel was converted to a military school. ϖ