Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Harmon was planned as a non-gaming hotel and condominium high-rise, with 400 rooms and 207 condo units. [2] It was designed by Foster and Partners, and was built on the Las Vegas Strip at the intersection of Harmon Avenue. [3] [4] The Harmon, planned as part of the CityCenter project by MGM Mirage and Dubai World, [3] was announced in ...
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.
Harmon Corner is located on the Las Vegas Strip, at the northeast corner of South Las Vegas Boulevard and Harmon Avenue. Development group BPS Partners purchased the vacant 2.17-acre (0.88 ha) property from Clark County, Nevada in February 2010, at a cost of $25 million.
The Hard Rock Hotel and Casino was a resort located near the Las Vegas Strip in Paradise, Nevada, United States.It now operates as Virgin Hotels Las Vegas.The resort is located on 16.7 acres (6.8 ha) [1] on the corner of Harmon Avenue and Paradise Road, about a mile east of the Las Vegas Strip. [2]
Aria Campus, commonly known by its former name CityCenter, is a mixed-use, urban complex on the Las Vegas Strip in Paradise, Nevada.It is located on 67 acres (27 ha) and contains a total of 18-million sq ft (1,700,000 m 2).
Oyo Hotel & Casino [a] is a casino hotel near the Las Vegas Strip in Paradise, Nevada, United States. It is owned by Highgate and Oyo Hotels & Homes, and its casino is operated by Paragon Gaming. It is located east of the Strip and next to the former site of the Tropicana resort. The hotel has 696 rooms with a 30,000-square-foot (2,800 m 2) casino.
Rank Name Image Height ft (m) Floors Year Coordinates Notes The Strat: 1,149 (350) 106 1996 Tallest observation tower in the United States, second-tallest in the Western Hemisphere after the CN Tower in Toronto; second-tallest free-standing structure in the U.S. west of the Mississippi River, after the Kennecott Smokestack in Utah; has been the tallest structure in Las Vegas since 1996.
In 2006, readers of the Las Vegas Review-Journal voted it "Hotel Most Deserving of Being Imploded". [201] Wynn, who now owned the Wynn Las Vegas resort across the street, called the aging Frontier "the single biggest toilet in Las Vegas". [202] The New Frontier was the last of the Hughes-era casinos to be demolished. [200]