Rampart Casino Rebrands as 'Resort at Summerlin'
JW Marriott Las Vegas and Rampart Casino complete $75 million renovation with new unified identity. Locals casino gets a fresh look.
By Vegas Vic
The Rampart Casino is dead. Long live The Resort at Summerlin. JW Marriott Las Vegas and its attached casino have completed a property-wide rebrand as part of a $75 million, multi-year renovation that's been transforming the off-Strip locals spot.
The Quick Hit
- What happened: JW Marriott and Rampart Casino now unified as "The Resort at Summerlin"
- The damage: $75 million renovation, new branding, updated everything
- Why you should care: If you play at Rampart, your home base just got a glow-up
- The move: Check it out next time you're on the west side
What's Changing
The rebrand officially unites the resort and casino under one name, which makes sense considering they've always been physically connected. The Rampart Casino name goes away, replaced by casino gaming at The Resort at Summerlin.
The $75 million renovation has touched basically every part of the property over the past few years. Guest rooms, public spaces, restaurants, and now the overall identity—all getting the refresh treatment.
For locals who've been playing at Rampart for years, the gaming floor experience shouldn't change dramatically. Same slots, same tables, same rewards program integration. Just a shinier wrapper and a new name on the door.
Why It Matters for Vegas Locals
The Summerlin area has been one of Vegas's fastest-growing neighborhoods for years. Station Casinos has Red Rock Resort dominating the market, and this rebrand positions The Resort at Summerlin as a more upscale alternative for players who want something a little different from the typical locals casino experience.
The JW Marriott brand carries weight with a certain demographic—business travelers, Marriott loyalists, people who want nicer rooms without dealing with the Strip. Leaning into that identity could help the property stand out in a crowded locals market.
The Vegas Rebrand Wave Continues
This is part of a broader trend we're seeing across Vegas. Station Casinos is investing $385 million into Durango as part of their 50th anniversary push. Properties everywhere are upgrading, rebranding, and trying to capture changing customer preferences.
The industry has figured out that stale casino floors don't attract new players. Renovations and fresh identities signal that a property is investing in its future—and that's good for players who want nice places to gamble.
The Bottom Line
If you've been a Rampart regular, don't panic. The casino isn't going anywhere—it's just getting a new name and a facelift. Same location, same neighborhood, hopefully same dealers you've been tipping for years.
The Resort at Summerlin. Get used to it. It's the new name of your favorite off-Strip hangout.