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Most people believe they know all there is to know about Las Vegas –
Sin City, founded by gangsters, a purely gambling-based economy, flowing
with booze, feeding addictions, anything goes. After all, what happens
in Vegas, stays in Vegas – right?
Oddly enough, the truth of Las Vegas is far stranger than what people
believe.
Las Vegas celebrated its 100th birthday in 2005, making it one of the
youngest cities in America. But people were coming to the Las Vegas Valley
long before its official designation as an incorporated city.
It was, as many still see it, an oasis in the desert. Literally. An oasis
with trees and a spring where wagon trains carrying supplies from Los
Angeles to the Mormon capital in Salt Lake City could stop to rest and
refill their water barrels in the mid- to late 19th Century. The first
non-Indian settlement was a small fort built on the orders of Mormon leader
Brigham Young in 1855; although abandoned two years later, it still stands
today as a museum on Las Vegas Boulevard.
While Mormons always have played – and continue to have –
a significant role in “Sin City” especially in the financial
community, they are not alone in terms of religious influence. Las Vegas
may have more ways and places to gamble than anywhere else on Earth, but
it also is home to hundreds of houses of worship, representing an extremely
wide range of religions.
Mining – especially silver – was the next major attraction
bringing people to the area. As often was the case that was soon followed
by a rail line. And that oasis of water made Las Vegas a major rail stop,
where steam locomotives – and crew and passengers – could
pick up water.
The railroad – then agriculture – joined mining as the linchpins
of the Las Vegas economy for nearly half a century. And while all of those
involved in those enterprises were known to play poker and other games
of chance, the first formal gambling licenses were not issued until 1911.
But it was another new state law making divorce quick and easy that actually
spurred the arrival of short-term visitors and money, most of them staying
at small “dude ranches” – precursors, in a way, to today’s
luxury hotel/casinos along The Strip.
A precedent of sorts was set in 1931, when Las Vegas first experienced
what has seemed a near invincibility to the economic downturns that have
affected the rest of the nation through the decades. With the Depression
well underway, the Las Vegas economy experienced a boom with the arrival
of thousands of workers building the giant Hoover (aka Boulder) Dam. Those
in charge, however, didn’t want their workers losing all their money
– and sleep – gambling, so they built the non-gambling town
of Boulder City to house them.
The next boom was World War II and the construction of Nellis Air Force
Base, which remains one of the largest and most important Air Force facilities
in the country.
It was not until after the war that the foundation for today’s gaming
industry came into being – along with the short but storied career
of one "Bugsy" Siegel and the Flamingo, which still stands (albeit
considerably changed over the years) at the heart of The Strip. It also
was then that gambling and tourism took over as the engine for Las Vegas’
future growth.
And considerable growth it has been. As late as 1960, the entire population
of Clark County barely exceeded 100,000. Today, it is pushing –
if not already over – 2 million, with an estimated 5000-to-6000
net new residents arriving every month.
Which brings up another, major misconception: The vast majority of tourists
who come to Las Vegas never actually set foot in Las Vegas. The city itself
is a relatively small part of the greater metropolitan area – and
does not include The Strip, McCarran International Airport, the Las Vegas
Convention Center or even the University of Nevada-Las Vegas.
McCarran is the nation’s fifth busiest airport; unlike those above
it on that list, however, McCarran is not a hub, where many passengers
are simply changing planes and never leave the airport. To paraphrase
the city’s motto, those who fly into Vegas, stay in Vegas. At least,
for an average of 3.4 nights.
The airport, which sits on the southeast edge of The Strip and has no
room left to grow, will reach maximum capacity by decade’s end.
A new airport has been proposed for about 30 miles outside Vegas, to siphon
off much of the international and other long-distance flights. If built,
their combined maximum capacity will be about 90 million passengers a
year, sometime in the 2020s – about double the current rate.
Las Vegas is the world’s unchallenged king of hotels, boasting more
than 140,000 rooms by the end of 2007 and more than 175,000 by the end
of the decade. That tally includes 12 of the world’s 15 largest
hotels – from current Number 1 MGM/Grand to soon-to-be new champion,
the Venetian/Palazzo.
The same is true for convention space, with three of the nation’s
largest convention centers plus hundreds of thousands of more square feet
of meeting space in all those hotels. The result: More than 22,000 conventions
and trade shows every year – a number that is expected to grow dramatically
as the available convention space increases by 50 percent in the next
three years.
The average life of a hotel/casino is Las Vegas is about 25 years –
making implosions of these huge complexes practically an annual festivity.
In 2007, that “honor” is scheduled for the Stardust and possibly
the Imperial Palace, although the recent change of ownership at Harrah’s
(which just bought the adjoining IP) could change that. Others reportedly
being measured for wrecking balls include the New Frontier, Riviera, Las
Vegas Hilton (next to the Convention Center) and Sahara.
With some coming down, others going up and existing hotels adding new
towers all the time, anyone who hasn’t been to Vegas in two or three
years isn’t likely to recognize it the next time they visit. That
has been true for decades and almost certainly will remain true for decades
to come.
At the moment, the biggest change in the skyline is the appearance of
dozens of new high-rise condominiums – what some call the “Manhattanization”
of Las Vegas. But all those new residents have to live somewhere –
and, increasingly, they don’t want that to be 30 miles out in the
desert. Which is why the bulk of the high-rises are going up within a
block of The Strip.
With all those new residents, it shouldn’t be a surprise that Clark
County – which comprises the Las Vegas metro area – is the
fifth largest school district in the nation. About a dozen new schools
open every year – many of them over-crowded on day one.
Las Vegas also is becoming a major medical center, not because of some
15 major medical facilities, but because of its expanding investment and
growth in cutting-edge medical technology, training and development. In
fact, the Nevada Development Authority predicts Las Vegas one day will
be as well known as a center for high tech medicine as it is for gambling.
It already has become known as a major culinary center, with a goodly
portion of visitors coming as much to enjoy dozens of world-class restaurants
as to gamble. Or watch dozens of world-class shows, including five different
productions by Cirque de Soleil. Or shop at some of the nation’s
largest – and most unusual – shopping centers. Or play golf
on some 60 courses, among them many by the world’s top championship
designers.
Las Vegas remains – and almost certainly always will be –
the world’s premier destination for gambling and adult entertainment.
Always changing, like a shimmering mirage in the desert, it is a place
that is always new, no matter how many times you visit.
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