Work starts on £150m casino complex at NEC, Birmingham
The seven-storey Resorts World complex, being built on the site of the NEC near Birmingham, will include a hotel, restaurants, cinema and shops.
The Malaysian company Genting, which sponsors Aston Villa, is behind the development which is expected to be completed in 2015.
Genting said the scheme involved 1,750 construction jobs, while the completed complex would offer 1,100 jobs.
Paul Thandi, chief executive of the NEC Group, said the project which covers 538,000 sq ft (163,982 sq m) would "make a significant contribution to the local economy".
He said: "We are genuinely proud to be officially starting the construction work on Resorts World Birmingham.
"Our partnership with Genting marks an important step in our wider vision to make the NEC site more of a destination and the place where people come to discover the future."
Mr Thandi said the facility aimed to help ensure the site had greater appeal.
However, some people have warned the new casino could create more gambling "addicts".
Prof Jim Orford, from the University of Birmingham, said research found new casinos lead to such problems in the surrounding area.
"The local population is at risk," he said.
"A few years later we find that the rate of gambling problems affecting individuals and their families go up in the neighbourhood."
Peter Brooks, president and chief operating officer of Genting UK, said the casino would make up 10% of the development and the firm was aware of problem gambling.
He said: "We take these issues of social responsibility very seriously.
"We invest a lot of money in training our people so they're aware and can help."
The Birmingham project is one of eight large casinos which have been approved by the Casino Advisory Panel.
The National Casino Forum said it was set to be the second of these to open following the opening of Westfield casino, next to the Olympic Park in east London, in 2011.