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Tamares sold the Las Vegas Club two years later to Derek and Greg Stevens, who owned two other downtown casinos. The Stevens closed the Las Vegas Club casino on August 20, 2015, with plans to redevelop the resort through renovations and some demolition. It was later decided that the Las Vegas Club would be demolished entirely for a new resort.
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The Plaza Hotel & Casino in downtown Las Vegas filed a lawsuit against El Ad later in 2007. The suit expressed concern about possible confusion as a result of two Plaza resorts competing in the same city. [62] [63] [64] El Ad prevailed a year later, winning the right to use the Plaza name for its Las Vegas resort.
[3] [4] That year, Derek Stevens also purchased a 2-acre site across the street from the Las Vegas Club, between the Plaza Hotel & Casino and the Main Street Station. The property would become the site of the new resort's eventual parking garage. [2] [6] The Las Vegas Club, Mermaids, and Glitter Gulch were demolished in 2017. [1] [7]
In 2016, they purchased the adjacent Mermaids Casino and Glitter Gulch strip club, [38] both of which were demolished along with the Las Vegas Club. The Stevens had the Circa Resort & Casino built on the property, opening it in late 2020. [1] [39] [40] Circa was the biggest project of Stevens' career. [17]
The Tropicana Las Vegas was a casino hotel on the Las Vegas Strip in Paradise, Nevada. It operated from 1957 to 2024. In its final years, the property included a 44,570 sq ft (4,141 m 2) casino and 1,467 rooms. The complex occupied 35 acres (14 ha) at the southeast corner of the Tropicana - Las Vegas Boulevard intersection.
Some of my favorite hotels on the Strip include Aria Resort & Casino, the Bellagio Hotel & Casino, NoMad Las Vegas, and Resorts World Las Vegas. Forgetting to make reservations at popular restaurants
The Riviera (colloquially, "the Riv") [1] [2] was a hotel and casino on the northern Las Vegas Strip in Winchester, Nevada. [3] It opened on April 20, 1955, and included a nine-story hotel featuring 291 rooms. The Riviera was the first skyscraper in the Las Vegas Valley, and was the area's tallest building until 1956. Various hotel additions ...