[1] The amenities include three hotels (a Grand Hyatt, SLS Baha Mar, and the Rosewood) with a total of 2,200 rooms, 284 private residences, a 100,000-square-foot (9,300 m2) casino, a 30,000-square-foot (2,800 m2) spa, and a Tournament Players Club golf course designed by Jack Nicklaus.
[2] On 30 March 2010, a local Bahamas-based investor and the government announced an agreement on the redevelopment of the resort to help revitalize Cable Beach, the most popular beachfront destination on New Providence Island.
[5][6] By April 2016, construction was halted for nearly a year with the resort 97% complete[7] following the original investor's Chapter 11 bankruptcy filed in 2015 in a Delaware court (sidestepping Bahamas jurisdiction) but dismissed in September.
[8] In December 2016, Chow Tai Fook agreed to buy Baha Mar from the Exim Bank.
[9][10] Chow Tai Fook assumed management of the property in March 2017, and completed its purchase in December 2017.