Current:Home > ContactAfter reshaping Las Vegas, The Mirage to be reinvented as part of a massive Hard Rock makeover -AssetScope
After reshaping Las Vegas, The Mirage to be reinvented as part of a massive Hard Rock makeover
View
Date:2025-04-12 11:26:18
LAS VEGAS (AP) — The Mirage is about to vanish from the Las Vegas Strip.
Gambling ends and the doors close Wednesday at the iconic tropical island-themed hotel-casino that opened in 1989 with a fire-spewing volcano outside, and Siegfried & Roy’s lions and dolphins inside.
Frenzied final days have seen standing-room crowds wagering to win $1.6 million in slot machine progressive jackpot winnings that state regulations say have to be disbursed before the lights go out and a massive transformation of the property begins.
Guest rooms are already empty. The Beatles-themed Cirque du Soleil show “Love” ended its 18-year run earlier this month. When gamblers are gone, only memories will remain of former casino mogul Steve Wynn’s hotel that revolutionized the casino resort industry.
“Las Vegas always reinvents itself,” said Michael Green, a University of Nevada, Las Vegas history professor whose father dealt blackjack for decades at casinos, including the long-ago-imploded Stardust and Showboat. “The Mirage is no longer state-of-the-art.”
New operators Hard Rock International and Florida-based Seminole Gaming plan to add 600 rooms to an existing 3,044 in a bright new guitar-shaped hotel where the sidewalk-side volcano rumbled and gushed nightly. Renderings depict guitar string-like beams spiking into the night sky from a purplish 660-foot (201-meter) tower.
“The Mirage was a transcendent property, changing the landscape of Las Vegas,” said Joe Lupo, president of The Mirage who will stay on at the new resort. “We are confident that Hard Rock Las Vegas will do the same in 2027.”
There won’t be a demolition spectacle like the now-shuttered Tropicana casino-hotel several blocks down the Strip. That 22-story property is slated to be dynamited sometime later this year, to be replaced before 2028 by a baseball stadium to serve as the home field of the relocated MLB Oakland A’s.
At ceremonies Wednesday, some of the 127 employees who’ve been at The Mirage since it opened planned to mark its end with Lupo; Jim Allen, chairman of Hard Rock International and CEO of Seminole Gaming; and Alan Feldman, a longtime MGM Resorts casino executive who is now a fellow at the gambling institute at University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Feldman was Wynn’s first publicist at the new resort.
“The doors opened to a crush of humanity and it stayed like that for days,” Feldman recalled in an interview. “It’s hard to capture what The Mirage changed. One of the things was that Las Vegas became more than Elvis, showgirls, round beds and gambling.”
Costing $630 million, it was no simple gambling hall. It was the world’s largest hotel at the time. Guests were met by a faint piña colada scent and two bronze mermaid statues on the way to check in at a desk with a huge shark and reef fish tank behind it.
It had glitzy shops, celebrity chef restaurants and theater-sized showrooms featuring headliners like Johnny Mathis, Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton.
“Instead of neon, a garden of dozens of rich Canary Island palm trees and a cool refreshing waterfall,” Wynn recalled in a statement released Monday through his Las Vegas attorney, Donald Campbell. Wynn titled it “An Homage to Lady Mirage.”
Amid competition from casinos in Atlantic City, New Jersey, and the expansion of tribal gambling in California, Wynn noted that The Mirage was the first new hotel to be built in Las Vegas in years. Its completion ushered in a virtual doubling of the resort capacity over the next decade — more than 30,000 hotel rooms — making Las Vegas one of the fastest growing cities in America.
“To call The Mirage a catalyst would be an understatement,” Wynn wrote.
By 2000, new resorts included Excalibur, Luxor, Treasure Island, MGM Grand, New York-New York, Monte Carlo, Bellagio, Mandalay Bay, Venetian and Paris Las Vegas. Many were funded by Wall Street bonds. Wynn bought and demolished the 50-year-old Desert Inn to build and open his eponymous Wynn Resort in 2005.
Wynn, now 82 and living in Florida, paid a $10 million fine to Nevada gambling regulators last year and cut ties with the industry he helped shape to end a yearslong legal fight stemming from media reports in 2018 that he sexually harassed or assaulted several women at his hotels. He has always denied the allegations against him.
Feldman recalled that the design of The Mirage made it “an unusual and unexpected place, where people wondered, ‘How do you have all this in the middle of the desert?’”
Bo Bernhard, director of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas International Gaming Institute, studies the emergence of what he terms the “fun economy” around the world. He said The Mirage gave Las Vegas an exportable product, like cars from Detroit, and set a standard for resort development in places like Singapore and Sydney.
The Seminole Tribe acquired the Hard Rock brand in 2007 and is the first Native American operator in the lucrative and competitive Las Vegas Boulevard corridor. The tribe also operates seven casinos in Florida and owns the Hard Rock Hotel & Casinos business with locations in 76 countries. It purchased naming rights in 2016 to Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.
An off-Strip former Hard Rock Hotel in Las Vegas was separately owned. A group that included billionaire Richard Branson, founder of the Virgin Group, acquired that hotel-casino in 2018 from a Toronto investment giant for around $500 million. It was renovated and reopened in 2021 as Virgin Hotels Las Vegas.
veryGood! (85931)
Related
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- More young people could be tried as adults in North Carolina under bill heading to governor
- Woman fatally stabbed 3-year-old within seconds after following family from store, police say
- Key figure at Detroit riverfront nonprofit charged with embezzling millions
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Stock exchanges need better back up for outages, watchdog says
- A look at the key witnesses in Hunter Biden’s federal firearms trial
- AT&T says it has resolved nationwide issue affecting ability of customers to make calls
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Iowa sheriff finds 3 dead, 1 injured in rural home near Cedar Rapids
Ranking
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- Who will Jake Paul fight next? Here are his options after Mike Tyson’s ulcer flareup
- Walmart offers bonuses to hourly workers in a company first
- Hubble Space Telescope faces setback, but should keep working for years, NASA says
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Sturgill Simpson to release new album under a new name, embark on 2024 concert tour
- UN migration and refugee agencies cite ‘fundamental’ right to asylum after US moves to restrict it
- Trump asks to have gag order lifted in New York criminal trial
Recommendation
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
3 newborn babies abandoned in London over 7 years are all related, court reveals
Walmart offers bonuses to hourly workers in a company first
Lenny Kravitz Shares Sweet Insight Into His Role in Zoë Kravitz's Wedding to Channing Tatum
Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
LA28 organizers choose former US military leader Reynold Hoover as CEO
Thousands pay tribute to Connecticut state trooper killed during highway traffic stop
Inside NBC’s Olympics bet on pop culture in Paris, with help from Snoop Dogg and Cardi B