Casino Baden-Baden
N 48° 45.612 E 008° 14.213
32U E 443916 N 5401079
The Baden-Baden casino is one of the oldest and most traditional in all of Europe.
Waymark Code: WM16GE
Location: Baden-Württemberg, Germany
Date Posted: 01/31/2007
Views: 175
It is just as hard to imagine Baden-Baden without its casino as it is to imagine the city without its thermal baths. Today, the white ball is still rolling in the famed, sumptuous rooms that casino lessee Edouard Bénazet had designed by interior decorators from Paris. And today, some 200 years later, the Baden-Baden casino still numbers among the world’s most beautiful.
The flair of the historic gaming rooms captivates all who visit them, and the casino’s guest book is filled with illustrious names. The Russian writer Dostoevsky wrote "The Gambler" while compulsively gambling at the famous Baden-Baden Casino.
With a history dating back over 250 years and fashioned on the lines of French royal palaces, the Baden-Baden Casino is, and always has been, a temple to the alluring game of chance. What was in the last century a social rendezvous for nobles and the elite, nowadays opens its doors to all of Baden-Baden’s guests.
The Baden-Baden Casino is situated in the Kurhaus. The Kurhaus was converted from a Promenade House into a "Conversation House" between 1821 and 1824 by Freidrich Weinbrenner. Upon completion, a license was issued for a Casino to be operated on the premises, and it now makes up the right wing of the building.
Some other important dates in its history :
1824- Friedrich Weinbrenner builds the Kurhaus. The gaming room there is today known as the Weinbrenner Room. The government of the Grand Duke in Karlsruhe signs a 15-year lease with the casino operator Chabert.
1838- The gaming rooms in the Paris Palais Royal are closed. The Paris casino lessee Jacques Bénazet takes over the casino in Baden-Baden. The fashionable game of roulette gradually ousts the card games pharao and rouge et noir.
1848- After the death of his father, Edouard Bénazet takes over the casino. The new lessee, who counts many prominent people among his friends, arranges for famous musicians and actors to come to Baden-Baden and organizes the first Iffezheim race meeting in 1858.
1855- Edouard Bénazet inaugurates the new gaming rooms in the right wing of the Kurhaus, which were created by interior decorators and artists from Paris: the Winter Garden, the Red Room, the Florentine Room and the Salon Pompadour.
1872- The German government in Berlin orders the closing of all German casinos.
1933- The casino is reopened for business, to be closed again in 1944 in the final months of the Second World War.
1950- Ceremonial opening of the "third" Baden-Baden casino.
Minimum bets are €5.00, maximum €10,000, but if you prefer to keep your money in your pocket you can always take a guided tour. Tours of the Casino are available daily from 9:30am until 11:30 between April and September, and from 10:00am until 11:30 between October and March. Prior arrangement should be made for tours in English, French and Russian.
Or you can drop by after 14:00 to gamble or just observe. (This is no problem — a third of the visitors only observe.) The place is most interesting in action; you can people-watch under chandeliers. The casino is open for gambling daily from 14:00 to 2:00 in the morning (Fri–Sat to 3:00, €3 entry, €1.50 entry with Kurkarte discount card from your hotel, €5 minimum bet, €10,000 maximum bet, no blue jeans or tennis shoes, tie and coat required and can be rented for €11 with an €11 deposit, passport absolutely required, under 21 not admitted, liveliest after dinner and later, pick up English history and game rules as you enter.
Game Offer Minimum Bet
2 French Roulette tables 2 / 5 / 10 €
1 American Roulette table 2 / 5 / 10 €
8 Euroulette tables 2 / 5 / 10 €
3 Black Jack tables 10 €
2 Baccara tables 50 €
3 Poker tables:
Seven Card Stud, Tropical Poker, Texas Hold'em, Omaha
128 slot machines 0,10 € / 0,50 €
From classic one-armed bandits to state-of-the-art touch-screen machines – you are sure to find your favourite opponent from among the 128 gaming machines in the basement of the historic Kurhaus vault. A five-digit jackpot is nothing out of the ordinary here. And can be won with a minimum bet.
You are always welcome (minimum age of 21) in this section whether in fancy or casual dress, with or without a tie.
There are various bars and a restaurant located in the gambling rooms.
Address: Werderstr. 4, Villa Schott Baden-Baden , Germany 76530
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Visit Instructions:
Listings should have -
- Slot machines as well as gaming tables.
- Entertainment other than gambling should be identified within each Waymark.
This category is not intended to include places where there is an accumulation of slot machines (as occurs in gas stations and grocery stores across Nevada).