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Unlike recent Las Vegas resorts which featured a theme, [117] CityCenter was designed as a modern urban district, similar to Greenwich Village or Haight-Ashbury. Speaking about CityCenter in 2004, Murren said, "I think the era of themes have come and gone in Las Vegas. I think the word is 'feel.'
Las Vegas Nevada Temple: Operating 80,350 sq ft (7,465 m 2) 10.3 acres (41,683 m 2) December 16, 1989 Gordon B. Hinckley edit: 44 Toronto Ontario Temple: Rededication scheduled 57,982 sq ft (5,387 m 2) 13.4 acres (54,228 m 2) 25 August 1990 Gordon B. Hinckley: edit: 45 San Diego California Temple: Closed for renovation 72,000 sq ft (6,689 m 2)
The temple was dedicated as "an oasis of peace and light." [6] In 2020, like all those in the church, the Las Vegas Nevada Temple was closed in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. [7] Throughout its history, the Las Vegas Nevada Temple has served as a center of spiritual growth, playing a vital role in the lives of church members in the region.
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63 CityCenter is a four-story shopping mall on the Las Vegas Strip in Paradise, Nevada. It is part of the CityCenter complex, developed by MGM Resorts International. The two-acre site was previously planned as The Harmon, a hotel within CityCenter. However, due to structural defects, the hotel never opened and was dismantled in 2015.
Knights of Pythias Building (Virginia City, Nevada) 1876 built 1966 NRHP cp-listed B Street, btwn Union & Sutton Sts. Virginia City, Nevada: Contributing property in Virginia City Historic District. [1] 16: Pythian Temple (New York City) 1927 built 1986 converted to residential 135 West 70th Street New York, New York
The Castaways was a hotel and casino on the Las Vegas Strip in Paradise, Nevada. It began in the 1930s, as a small motel called Mountain View. It became the San Souci in 1939, and underwent several ownership changes in its early years. A hotel addition opened on August 21, 1955, when the property became the Sans Souci Hotel.
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