Citations:Cotai

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English citations of Cotai

2005 2007 2010s 2022
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  • 2005 March 19, “World Business Briefing Asia: China: Casinos In Macao Deal”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 29 May 2015, Business Day‎[2]:
    The first phase of the project in Macao's Cotai area, set to open in 2007, will feature seven resort hotels with more than 10,000 rooms, casinos and eight entertainment theaters as well as a convention center, said the Las Vegas Sands chairman, Sheldon G. Adelson.
  • 2007, Steven K. Bailey, “Macau's Dual Heritage”, in Strolling in Macau: A Visitor's Guide to Macau, Taipa, and Coloane[3], ThingsAsian Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 30:
    Meanwhile, Las Vegas Sands began constructing an even larger complex of luxury casino-hotels in the COTAI district, the mile-long (1.6 km) strip of reclaimed land that joins Taipa and Coloane islands. The Sands dubbed its development the COTAI Strip, in honor of the famed Las Vegas Strip.
  • 2011 September 11, Donny Kwok, “Wynn to pay $193 mln to Macau for Cotai project development”, in Muralikumar Anantharaman, editor, Reuters[4], archived from the original on 19 August 2016, Market News‎[5]:
    Wynn Macau , a unit of Wynn Resorts Ltd , said on Monday it would pay $193.43 million to the Macau government for use of land to develop its resort project in the Cotai area.
    In a filing to the Hong Kong stock exchange, Wynn Macau said it formally accepted the terms and conditions of a land concession contract from the Macau government regarding about 51 acres of land in the Cotai area for development into a resort containing a five-star hotel, gaming areas, retail, entertainment, food and beverage, spa and convention offerings.
  • 2012 May 9, “Wynn's profits rise but game plan is for Cotai”, in South China Morning Post[6], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 16 September 2023[7]:
    The core of Macau's gaming industry is moving to Cotai, which is already home to Galaxy Entertainment, Sands China and Melco Crown Entertainment.
  • 2014 January 10, Matthew G. Miller, Peter Newcomb, “Bloomberg Billionaires Index: The rich got $524 billion richer in 2013”, in The Washington Post[8], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 10 January 2014[9]:
    Galaxy shares soared 129 percent in 2013 as Lui and his son Francis expanded their biggest property, Galaxy Macau, in the city's Cotai area to capitalize on record visits by gamblers from China.
  • 2015 July 20, Ellie Ng, “Macau activists fear state snooping amid Hacking Team leaks”, in Hong Kong Free Press[10], archived from the original on 19 November 2023:
    One of the leaked email threads reveals that the judiciary police, a department specialising in criminal investigations, had arranged for a private demonstration of Hacking Team’s spyware tool at the Cotai police station in October 2012.
  • 2016, Alex Berenson, The Wolves[11] (Fiction), Wheeler Publishing, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 380:
    As he flew in, he saw his new casino towering over Cotai, its structural work finished months before, ready to open as soon as the workers installed beds and furniture and of course the baccarat tables. He realized he was looking at the perfect four-billion-dollar excuse.
    Cheung had bitten. Now Duberman stood on the roof of the Sky, looking at the bridges that connected Cotai with the old Macao.
  • 2017 May, Emily Matchar, Piera Chen, “Macau”, in Hong Kong (Lonely Planet)‎[12], 17th edition, Lonely Planet Global Limited, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 192:
    Taipa was once two islands that were slowly joined together by silt from the Pearl River. A similar physical joining has happened to Taipa and Coloane because of land reclamation from the sea. The new strip of land joining the two islands is known as Cotai (from Coloane and Taipa).
  • 2022 March 7, “Education has instilled love of motherland in Macao people, CPPCC member says”, in The National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference[13], archived from the original on 22 September 2023, What They Say‎[14]:
    Aerial photo taken on July 23, 2020 shows a view of the new city of Cotai in Macao.