Boardwalk Hotel and Casino
This article needs additional citations for verification. (May 2015) |
Boardwalk Hotel and Casino | |
---|---|
Location | Paradise, Nevada |
Address | 3750 Las Vegas Blvd South |
Opening date | 1989 |
Closing date | January 9, 2006 |
Theme | Coney Island |
No. of rooms | 654 |
Total gaming space | 33,000ft² |
Casino type | Land-Based |
Owner | MGM Mirage |
Previous names | Holiday Inn (1966-1985), Viscount Hotel (1985-1988), Boardwalk Hotel & Casino (1988-2006) |
Renovated in | 1996 |
Coordinates | 36°6′24″N 115°10′27″W / 36.10667°N 115.17417°W |
The Boardwalk Hotel and Casino was a Coney Island style hotel located on the Las Vegas Strip. It was owned and operated by MGM Mirage. It was part of the Holiday Inn hotel chain until it was acquired by MGM in 2000. It was built before the era of the mega-casinos, and with 654 rooms was relatively small compared to many properties in its vicinity.
The Boardwalk was located in between the Bellagio and the Monte Carlo and across from the Paris, Aladdin and MGM Grand.
The hotel's Coney Island theme could be seen in its facade with an original 1906 parachute jump ride and a faux wooden roller coaster. The hotel was composed of three distinct buildings all built at different times. The newest building was the 16-story tower built in 1996. The Steeplechase building was 6 stories and the Luna Park building was the original four-story structure when the hotel first opened.
History
The hotel began as a 200-room Holiday Inn that opened on this site in 1966.[1] Norbert Jansen, former owner of Pioneer Club, opened Holiday Gifts adjacent to the hotel, and later Slot Joynt casino.[2] The hotel section was briefly named Viscount Hotel in the 1980s.[3] By 1989, under the management of Jansen, the hotel and casino were branded Boardwalk Hotel & Casino (alternately, Holiday Inn Casino Boardwalk,[4] or Boardwalk Holiday Inn).
Boardwalk became a public corporation (Boardwalk Casino, Inc.) in 1994. The carnival facade was built the following year and a 15-floor, 451-room tower was finished in 1996.[5][6] It was later acquired by Mirage Resorts in 1997. When MGM took ownership in 2000, the Holiday Inn name was dropped.[7]
The hotel and casino closed on January 9, 2006, and the main hotel tower was imploded on May 9, 2006. The property is now the location of CityCenter.
Attractions
- Wedding gazebo
- Two small pools
- Several restaurants including a sushi bar and the 24-hour "Surf Buffet"
- 75-seat race and sports book
- Prince cover band Purple Reign
References
- ^ http://vintagelasvegas.com/post/111498565409/
- ^ http://vintagelasvegas.com/post/111498565409/
- ^ http://vintagelasvegas.com/post/111498565409/
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/19970206052947/http://www.hiboardwalk.com/hotel.htm
- ^ http://www.emporis.com/buildings/176297/
- ^ http://skyscraperpage.com/cities/?buildingID=20368
- ^ http://www.academia.edu/7718861/List_of_Las_Vegas_Casinos
External links
- Casinos completed in 1965
- Hotel buildings completed in 1965
- Hotel buildings completed in 1996
- Defunct casinos in the Las Vegas Valley
- Defunct hotels in the Las Vegas Valley
- 2006 disestablishments in Nevada
- Skyscraper hotels in the Las Vegas Valley
- Demolished hotels in Clark County, Nevada
- Casino hotels
- 1965 establishments in Nevada