Next to it are two rows of big leather chairs in front of the sportsbook’s only big screen. This section can easily hold 30-40 people.
When you enter, there is either counter row seating or small round tables and chairs. As you get further inside, it feels substantially more private because the edges of the sportsbook are right near the noisy slots. The sportsbook is horizontally built and across from the poker room. It is by no means a large sportsbook, and the racebook, though adjacent to it, is separate from the sportsbook. The book has an entrance that leads directly to the parking lot and has a variety of comfortable seating. However, its sound quality was overall mediocre because it was much better in some parts of the book than others. Palace Station SportsbookĪfter giving itself a little makeover, Palace Station’s sportsbook was aesthetically pleasing when we walked in.
It’s never going to be a place that makes you think, “I have to come back here”, however, its sportsbook isn’t bad at all. Its immediate surroundings are a little shady, and the overall feeling of being inside Palace Station is something of a “down and out” experience. It’s on Sahara Avenue and about one mile west of the northern side of Las Vegas Blvd. It caters to locals and tourists who want to save money by staying off the strip. Once known as Bingo Palace, Palace Station, which opened in 1976, is the oldest of the Station Casinos.