Las Vegas: 5/12-17/09
Posted: June 3rd, 2009 | Filed under: Out Of TownLas Vegas from May 12 to May 17, 2009.
The Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area was surprising in a great way; Las Vegas is hundreds of square miles of concrete and I really never connected the place to natural beauty. There is actually a lot of natural beauty in the area:
But of course there is also the main reason over 37 million people visit Las Vegas each year — its pedestrian-friendly urban planning. Here is a walk down The Las Vegas Strip During The Day (a few images are from our 2005 trip to Las Vegas, but the bulk of them are new, and there are links to each spot from the page). We started out near the Happi Inn, across from the Luxor, a remnant of the “old” Strip:
. . . learned about our entertainment options:
. . . and ended our journey at the strange architecture of Fashion Show, 2.5 miles later:
Along the way we wended through Luxor, Excalibur and New York-New York, got lost in the MGM Grand (and its Lion Habitat), passed by the mammoth new construction at CityCenter, skirted by Planet Hollywood and Paris Las Vegas, stopped in the Bellagio Hotel & Casino and the World Recordbreaking Chocolate Fountain at Jean-Philippe Patisserie, scooted across one of the pedestrian walkways that rises above the ten-lane roads to Caesars Palace where we saw the odd animatronic Fall of Atlantis Fountain Show, the Aquarium and ate at Beijing Noodle No. 9, then walked by The Mirage and its Siegfried and Roy Statue, through Treasure Island and finally visited the Wynn, before heading back to The M Resort in Henderson via its shuttle bus that departs from Fashion Show. We walk a lot but this was a long day.
Feed: Lotus of Siam for the best Thai food in the U.S. (and this includes Woodside, Queens’ Sripraphai . . . highly recommended), Raku Japanese Charcoal Grill (highly recommended) and Bartolotta at the Wynn (highly highly recommended). This dish at Raku was described as “Bonito Guts”:
Oddities: Serge’s Showgirl Wigs in the same shopping center as Lotus of Siam, the Welcome To Fabulous Las Vegas Sign at the southern end of the Strip, the Las Vegas Monorail (the first privately financed mass transportation system in the U.S. since WWII — it’s also really expensive at $5 a trip!) and the PG-13 Sirens of TI show outside Treasure Island.
And then of course there are the slot machines at McCarran International Airport: