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AREA15 is an experiential retail and entertainment complex located in Las Vegas, Nevada, one mile west of the Las Vegas Strip. It houses several major experiential entertainment residencies and includes sculptures and other art displays, as well as alcohol outlets and a restaurant. AREA15 is a joint project between Fisher Brothers and Beneville ...
Blvd is being developed by New York-based Gindi Capital, which also owns the Showcase Mall, located further south on the Las Vegas Strip. The Blvd site was previously occupied by the Hawaiian Marketplace, [1] opened in 2004. [2] [3] [4] Other structures on the property included a strip mall known as Cable Center Shops, and the Boulevard food court.
The Dresden Room: 'Swingers' Los Angeles. The Dresden Room has been open since 1954 and had the longest-standing live music act with Marty and Elaine playing every Tuesday through Saturday for ...
Why you can't miss it: This self-proclaimed "Vegas as Vegas gets" 24-hour restaurant on the Strip is unabashedly stuck in an early '70s — the interior is festooned in pink and blue neon, stained ...
In 2008, Bolthouse began work on the newly opened luxury hotel SLS Hotel Beverly Hills [8] which features the four-star restaurant Bazaar by José Andrés. Upcoming projects include the in-development Sahara Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas. Also in 2008, Bolthouse began co-hosting a weekly radio show “Feel My Heat” on Indie 103.1 with Danny ...
[13] [14] [15] Proponents hoped to transform the area into a SoHo-style neighborhood. [16] The name Gateway Arts District was in use as of 2001, [17] and the area was renamed a year later as the Las Vegas Arts District. [14] By the end of 2002, numerous shops and restaurants had opened in the area, [14] and further development was in the ...
The American Film Market’s fortunes are changing. After 43 years in Los Angeles and Santa Monica, the AFM launches in Las Vegas within the towers of the Palms Casino Resort Nov. 5-10. Shifting ...
The Poverty Row area of Hollywood, bounded by Sunset Boulevard on the North, Gower Street on the West, and Beachwood Drive on the East, was a collection of small warehouses and offices where independent film makers gathered to buy "short ends" of film from the major studios, in order to create their "great American dreams".