Darby Development takes over lease of Monmouth Park; expansion planned

By: Thoroughbred Breeders Association of New Jersey

Posted: Sept. 1, 2024

Darby Development, which has operated Monmouth Park for the past 12 years, has assumed full custody of the property under a new 85-year lease agreement, it was announced Aug. 29.

Darby Development, which is under the leadership of Monmouth Park Chief Executive Officer and Chairman Dennis Drazin, has plans for expansion of the property that includes an already-under-construction sports book, hotel, housing, and more. The New Jersey Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association, in conjunction with the New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority, has transferred the racetrack to Darby Development effective immediately.

“Racing needs that kind of opportunity,” Drazin said. “You can’t just rely upon your racing products at this point in time to be successful. You have to make it a destination for people. It’s not just for horse racing. You have to bring people into the area with all the other entertainment aspects that you’re going to create in order to get them to cross over into horse racing and sustain the product, that revenue stream for horse racing.”

Darby Development will work with developer Morris Bailey to bring the vision for a new Monmouth Park to life. Work on the new Caesars Sportsbook began in May. Drazin said groundbreaking on other elements could happen within six to nine months.

Drazin said this plan has been in the works for the better part of the 12 years in which Darby operated the racetrack for the New Jersey THA.

“The horsemen really weren’t able to sustain all the obligations to keep the track open, so Darby has, in effect, been funding it for the past 12 years,” Drazin said. “We got to a point where the horsemen asked Darby to take over the obligations on the lease going forward; they recognized that they couldn’t make it sustainable, and so we entered into a partnership back in 2012 with Morris Bailey.”

Drazin said that in 2012, Bailey hired the architectural firm Populous, which worked on projects with Churchill Downs and is involved with the Belmont Park redesign, and it put forth a vision for what Monmouth Park could be in the future. The timing wasn’t right, but over the past two years Darby, Bailey’s JEMB Realty, the NJSEA, the governor’s office, and the town of Oceanport, N.J., have shaped a concept that is starting to become a reality.

Plans call for 298 over-55 apartments that will be built over what is currently surface parking that goes unused except on Haskell Day. In addition, JEMB Realty will develop 80 acres that will see construction of a 200-room, high-end hotel that will likely overlook the racetrack, a sports complex that can help draw youth tournaments to the area, and an entertainment complex. There will be an option to grow beyond that initial acreage as there are more than 300 acres to the property.

“The racetrack will receive a share of the revenues so that it will be sustainable for the future,” Drazin said. “In order to enable that, we needed to extend the lease, because our lease was 40 years, and we’re 12 into it. Now we have an 85-year lease, which makes the property much more sustainable for developers.”

“We have always been staunch advocates for returning the area to its rightful place as the premier destination for horse racing and family entertainment while including important components that serve the community at large,” Bailey said. “After an intensive, complex, and lengthy process, our plans will create a vibrant lifestyle destination for future generations and will put the racetrack on a trajectory for enormous growth.”