Jump to content

Paradise Palms

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by JPRiley (talk | contribs) at 04:58, 16 December 2015 (resident links). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Paradise Palms is a Mid Century Modern housing community in Las Vegas, Nevada.

In the 1960s Irwin Molasky's company Molasky Development hired the young architectural firm of Palmer & Krisel fresh from their success building hundreds of successful tract homes for Alexander Homes and other custom projects in Palm Springs, California.

"This unique subdivision was the first planned community in Clark County. We used curvilinear street patterns instead of rectilinear. Paradise Palms won the American Builder magazine award for one of the best planned communities in the U.S. The architects were two young men by the names of Palmer and Krisel. The interior designs were by world-renowned C. Tony Pereira." Irwin A. Molasky [1]

Construction

A William Krisel-designed home featuring a distinctive butterfly roof in Paradise Palms in Las Vegas, Nevada.

The tract is sprinkled with several Mid Century Modern home styles. The homes are standard post and beam construction on slab. Most sit on a 40-by-40-foot (12 by 12 m) imprint.

There were numerous models available, but to make the homes look custom, the footprints were rotated on their lots and flipped with a minimum of 3 different roof lines available: folded plate roof lines, butterfly roofs, ranch, and dramatic overhangs. The homes also featured unique decorative block work and stone screens and were generally finished in sanded stucco.

"Street side, facades stretched almost the full extent of the 100-foot (30 m) wide lots. Concrete block or extended stucco walls connecting house and carport were intended to add length to the front of the house for a more imposing appearance. Idiosyncratic decorative elements made use of wood, decorative concrete block, patterned brick, two-tone paint, rock, ironwork, spun fiberglass panels, and other materials." Robert Imber, Eichler Network

Stardust Country Club

Many of the homes in this tract back up to the Las Vegas National Golf Club. The Las Vegas National Golf Club began as the Stardust Country Club in 1961 (part of the Stardust Resort & Casino properties).

In 1969 it was purchased by the Del Webb Corporation and renamed the Sahara-Nevada Country Club. In 1982 it was purchased by American Golf Corporation who partnered with the Las Vegas Hilton in 1994 to create the Las Vegas Hilton Country Club, and was most recently renamed the Las Vegas National Golf Club in 1998. The original course record of 63 was set by Arnold Palmer in 1967 and held that record for 28 years.

Over the years it has hosted LPGA Championship Events and PGA Tournament of Champions. And it was supposedly a Rat Pack hangout back in 'the day.' The golf course was purchased in 2007 by a group led by real estate investor John Knott III.[2] It is currently managed by Harrah's Resorts.

Notable homes and residents

There are also homes by Molasky Homes and Palmer and Krisel on the Eastern side of the golf course off Eastern Avenue.

The home used to portray Frank Rosenthal's estate for the movie Casino is at the end of Cochise Street between the #1 and #18 fairways (although his actual home was within the Las Vegas Country Club Estates).

Famous residents of Paradise Palms throughout the decades have included celebrities Johnny Carson, Debbie Reynolds, Dean Martin, La Toya Jackson, Dinah Shore, Howard Hughes protégé Robert Maheu, and mobster Tony Spilotro. Other former residents include VeriSign co-founder Kristian Meier, renowned labor Attorney John Tofano, as well as politicians and various casino strip entertainment executives.

Paradise Palms notable residents (with their addresses) include:[3]

  • Juan García Esquivel (space age band leader) – 661 Seneca Circle
  • Rip Taylor and Sam "Baby Shoes" Prezant (bookmaker associated with the mob) – 3328 Pawnee Drive
  • Bobby Darin – 1438 Cayuga Pkwy
  • Pierre Bezard (Dunes music director) – 3451 Sioux Way
  • Judy Lynn (country music singer and Miss Idaho 1955) – 1389 Pawnee Drive
  • Bruno Scarrone (choreographer for Folies Bergere) – 1688 Pawnee Circle
  • Jerry Gordon (vice president of the Flamingo) and Tim Alexander (drummer for Primus) – 1676 Pawnee Circle
  • Buddy Sarkissian (drummer/musician in Armenian cabaret music) – 3558 Spencer Street
  • Johnny Carson and Joe Louis (world heavyweight boxing champion from 1937 to 1949) – 3333 Seminole Circle
  • Frank Rosenthal (the movie Casino was based on this person) – 3572 Spencer Street
  • Dick Cantino (musician/actor) and Vido Musso (musician) – 3355 Nahatan Way
  • Mike Corda (songwriter/ bandleader) – 3398 Nahatan Way
  • Gladys Knight (singer) (Gladys Knight & the Pips) - 1589 Golden Arrow Dr
  • Phyllis Diller – 1515 Cayuga Parkway
  • Stanley Morgan (The Ink Spots) – 1761 Ottawa Drive
  • Walter Zick (architect) – 3614 Ottawa Circle
A home in Paradise Palms designed by modernist architect William Krisel

References

  1. ^ "Irwin Molasky on Las Vegas Today and Paradise Palms' Lasting Legacy". BLVDS. 2012. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
  2. ^ "For those who live by golf course, a new worry". Las Vegas Sun. 2007-09-26. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
  3. ^ "Influential People Who Lived in Paradise Palms". Paradise Palms Las Vegas. 2011-01-16. Retrieved 2014-08-27.