Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Theater at Virgin Hotels Las Vegas, originally known as The Joint, is a theater located on the grounds of the Virgin Hotels Las Vegas in Paradise, Nevada, United States. It opened as The Joint on March 10, 1995, as part of the Hard Rock Hotel (later Virgin Hotels). The venue closed on February 7, 2009, and a new, larger building was opened ...
[b] During the 1999 expansion, the pool and beach club area was expanded by two acres, [284] and became one of the most popular party spots in Las Vegas. [104] The pool included two floating craps tables. [45] In 2004, the resort launched a public pool party known as Rehab, which became a successful, annual event until its end in 2018. [285]
Showboat facade and swimming pool, seen in 1961. The Showboat was built by William J. Moore of the Last Frontier and J. Kell Houssels of the Las Vegas Club [1] for $2 million. [2] The first resort within Las Vegas city limits, it had 100 rooms on two floors. [3]
Club Life, Vol. 1 - Las Vegas is a mix compilation album by internationally acclaimed [1] DJ/Producer Tiësto, released in 2011 and promoted globally with a live set show tour under the same name. It is the first installment of his new compilation series called Club Life .
Sunday, Las Vegas will be teeming with spots all over town to watch the Super Bowl. There will be all-you-can-drink-specials and prix fixe menus , pre-parties and after-parties , prop betting ...
On March 30, 1987, the Showboat Hotel, Casino and Bowling Center opened with a 60,000-square-foot (5,600 m 2) casino and a 60-lane bowling alley. [4] The complex was built on land leased from Resorts International, [5] just north of the under-construction Resorts Taj Mahal (which became the Trump Taj Mahal upon opening in 1990, now the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Atlantic City).
Tropicana Las Vegas is set to close Tuesday, April 2, just two days shy of its 67th anniversary.
Trump World's Fair at Trump Plaza was a hotel and casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey, that occupied 280 feet (85.3 m) of the Atlantic City boardwalk and was 21 floors in height. It had 500 guest rooms. It opened on April 14, 1981, as the Playboy Hotel and Casino, [1] then changed its name in 1984 to Atlantis Hotel and Casino.