Friday, May 29, 2020

NEVADA HOLIDAY: LAS VEGAS Day 8 Flamingo, Luxor, Excalibur, Aria


DAY 8 Thursday, December 22, 2011:

We were leaving that day, spent the morning at the nearby hotels.

BELLAGIO AGAIN:

These are the hose fountain arches at Bellagio conservatory.

 The loops of the roller coaster where riders are inverted can be seen in the pic below... loud screams can be heard here when the rollercoaster arrives at this spot…
 MGM Entrance...
 Statue of Liberty and Eiffel Tower on either side... Vegas is crazy…
 Skyscrapers, roller coaster, Liberty Statue of New York, New York as well as Excalibur towers.

EXCALIBUR:


Excalibur, named for the mythical sword of King Arthur, uses the Arthurian theme in several ways. Its facade is a stylized image of a castle. A wizard-like figure representing Merlin looks out from a turret.
Here we are inside Excalibur. Armored knight... in tune with the theme



Excalibur opened on June 19, 1990 and was originally built by Circus Circus Enterprises, which was purchased in 2005 by MGM Resorts. When it opened, Excalibur was the largest hotel in the world with over 4,000 rooms and covering over 70 acres. Now it is the fifth-largest hotel (by total number of rooms) in Las Vegas, and the seventh-largest hotel worldwide

 On the way to entering Excalibur... Newyork, Newyork facade of skyscrapers and its roller coaster.

LUXOR:

Here we are at Luxor. The hotel is named after the city of Luxor (ancient Thebes) in Egypt. 110-foot (34 m)-tall re-creation of the Great Sphinx of Giza here…


Luxor is the second largest hotel in Las Vegas (the largest being the MGM Grand) and the eighth largest in the world. This Egyptian decor was getting replaced…



When the resort opened, it featured the Nile River Tour which was a river ride that carried guests to different parts of the pyramid and passed by pieces of ancient artwork on a river that encircled the casino.... sadly not there any more…
The casino also featured King Tut’s Tomb and Museum, a duplicate of King Tutankhamen’s tomb as found in the Valley of the Kings near Luxor, Egypt....

In July 2007, owner MGM Resorts International announced plans to thoroughly renovate the Luxor, spending $300 million to remodel 80 percent of Luxor's public areas, removing much of the ancient Egyptian theme and replacing it with more adult-oriented and modern lounges... SAD!.
140-foot (43 m)-high obelisk at Luxor. 
  View from the cablecar here...There is a free tram that connects sister MGM properties Excalibur, Luxor and Mandalay Bay.
The pyramid cost $375 million to build.
 The main portion of Luxor hotel is a 365-foot high, 30-story pyramid encased in 11 acres of dark bronze glass. The guest rooms are situated on the outer walls of the pyramid and are reached by riding in "inclinators" that travel along the inner surface of the pyramid at a 39-degree angle. The hotel also features a 29 million cubic feet atrium, which was the largest open atrium in the world when it was built in 1993.The tip of the pyramid contains a fixed-position spotlight, Luxor Sky Beam that points directly upward and is the brightest beam in the world at over 42.3 billion candle power. Using computer designed, curved mirrors to collect the light from 39 Xenon lamps and focus them into one intense, narrow beam, engineers say that a person could read a newspaper by Luxor’s Sky Beam from ten miles up. On a clear night, the Sky Beam is visible up to 250 miles away to an airplane at cruising altitude, and is clearly visible from Outer Space.

 A second at the casino.. just for a pose..

MANDALAY BAY AGAIN:


Mandalay Bay lobby here... 
 The gold coloring of the hotel is a result of gold leaf used on the windows.
 Mandalay Beach is an 11 acres (4.5 ha) pool area with three heated pools, a wave pool with connecting pool for small children, and a lazy river that features a small waterfall.


The wave pool features 1.6 million gallons of water and waves in 90-second intervals with heights ranging anywhere from two to four feet. Because of this, it has a strict 48" height requirement....
 The European-style pool, called Moorea, features its own private bar as well as the allowance of female guests to bathe topless. Because of this, Moorea is separated from the rest of the pool by smoked glass windows and has an over-21 requirement. There are also two restaurants at the Beach. The pool area won the Las Vegas Review Journal's Reader's "Best Pool of Las Vegas" award for seven years in a row. One pool remains open throughout the winter months.

In keeping with the resort's tropical theme, it features a saltwater aquarium, the Shark Reef Aquarium, which contains the third largest tank in North America.
Shark Reef Aquarium contains numerous other exhibits, including two tunnel-shaped, walk-through aquarium.

   Inside the Crystals shopping mall stands Glacia, a feature that includes large pillars of carved ice, with the tallest one standing at 15 feet.
When these columns rise from a control room below, they are carved into a different pattern. This means the feature will never look the same twice. Colored lighting, along with music created by Mickey Hart of the Grateful Dead, add to the experience.

Halo is a collection of clear tubes spinning vortices of water. There are a total of 20 tubes, along with 30 windows below so we can see the water from underneath....these water features are awesome.

ARIA AGAIN:

Aria is the 9th-largest hotel in the world. Aria facade at CityCenter complex consists of two curved glass and steel highrise towers joined at the center.  
The sculpture on the right of the pic above is in detail below
 The resort's 61 and 51-story towers contain a AAA five diamond hotel with 4,004 guest rooms and suites, 16 restaurants, 10 bars and nightclubs, and a casino with 150,000 sq ft of gaming space. It also has a 215,000 sq ft pool area with 50 cabanas, an 80,000 sq ft salon and spa, a 300,000 sq ft convention center and a 1,800-seat theater which currently hosts Viva Elvis by Cirque du Soleil.

 It opened on December 16, 2009 as a joint venture between MGM Resorts International and Infinity World Development. At 4,000,000 sq ft (370,000 sq m) and 600 ft (180 m) in height, it is the largest and tallest structure at CityCenter.
Aria's classy interior...








Among the most notable aspects of Aria is its incorporation of technology in the exterior and interior design of the hotel, specifically for the reduction of energy consumption. It is the largest hotel in the world to have earned LEED Gold certification. Its smart rooms automatically adjust curtains, turn off unused lights and electronics, and regulate the temperature when a guest enters or leaves a room.

Happy to watch lovely art at exclusive art showrooms at Crystals



 Drag Queens posing in the background...

FLAMINGO:

At the entrance to our hotel Flamingo. It has 3,626 hotel rooms. The 15-acre site's architectural theme is Art Deco. It is the third resort to open on the Strip and the most luxurious in the world in 1946..., and the oldest resort on the Strip still in operation today. Built by mobster Bugsy Siegel. He named the resort after his girlfriend Virginia Hill, who loved to gamble and who was nicknamed Flamingo by Siegel due to her long, skinny legs. The cost of construction was huge...workers delivered by day, stole by night, and resold the next day. Siegel may actually have bought some of the same materials twice thanks to this kind of scheming.

 At the Flamingo Habitat.. Glad to see the flamingos and the other birds in the open air. This is open from 8 am to dusk. The bright-pink Chilean flamingos grow to be four feet tall, weighing six pounds. Notice how their knees bend the opposite direction of ours -- this allows them to sleep on one leg.
 Can see the hotel rooms behind... there was a wedding going on at the lawns near the chapel. There is a memorial plaque near the outdoor wedding chapel for Siegel, the original mobster owner who was shot to death in 1947.


We checked out, took the hotel shuttle to the airport and left Vegas .. with the memories of a GREAT holiday…

Report on our visit to Niagara Falls US side starts here:
https://adventuretrav.blogspot.com/2020/05/niagara-falls-us-side-intro-and-day-1.html


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