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Circus Circus Las Vegas is a hotel and casino located on the northern Las Vegas Strip in Winchester, Nevada. [1] It is owned and operated by Phil Ruffin. Circus Circus includes the largest permanent circus in the world. It features circus and trapeze acts, as well as carnival games, at its Carnival Midway.
Phillip Gene Ruffin (born March 14, 1935) is an American businessman. He owns the Treasure Island Hotel and Casino and Circus Circus Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas, in addition to a number of other enterprises including hotels, casinos, greyhound racing tracks, oil production, convenience stores, real estate, and the world's largest manufacturer of hand trucks.
Its converted Circus Circus (originally developed for the upmarket) and later Excalibur properties offered gaming opportunities for adults and separate non-gambling games and theme-park-style experiences for underage visitors under the same roof. In 1983, Circus Circus purchased the Edgewater Hotel and Casino in Laughlin, Nevada for $17 million.
Flamingo Las Vegas Hotel and Casino Las Vegas By the Numbers: 3,545 guest rooms and suites, more than 93,000 square-feet of casino space, 15-acre wildlife habitat
Adventuredome at street level. Circus Circus Enterprises announced the theme park on August 26, 1992, as an addition to its Circus Circus Las Vegas resort. [1] [2] The Grand Slam Canyon, themed after the Grand Canyon, would be built west of the casino, on a deck located above a parking lot.
The Meadows Casino & Hotel: Las Vegas: Clark: Nevada: Balance of Clark County: defunct closed 1942. Later demolished after it caught fire. First resort hotel-casino in Las Vegas. The Mint: Las Vegas: Clark: Nevada: Las Vegas Downtown: defunct closed 1988. Now part of Binion's Horseshoe. The Mirage: Paradise: Clark: Nevada: Las Vegas Strip ...
The two-year renovation, costing more than $550 million, concluded in December 2018. Hotel32 was removed, and the top four floors of the tower were rebranded as NoMad Las Vegas, a new hotel-within-a-hotel. Park MGM includes a 76,982-square-foot (7,200 m 2) casino and 2,700 rooms, not counting another 293 at NoMad, which brings the total to 2,993.
William G. Bennett (November 16, 1924 – December 22, 2002) was an American gaming executive and real estate developer. Noted for pioneering Las Vegas as a destination for middle-class tourists and their families, he is best remembered for his establishment of gaming giant Circus Circus Enterprises in 1974.