Las Vegas
Las Vegas, Nevada
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Las Vegas, Nevada
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Nickname: "The Entertainment Capital of the World" |
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Motto:
"'" |
| Official website:
http://www.lasvegasnevada.gov/ |
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Location |

Location of Las Vegas in Nevada |
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Government |
| County |
Clark |
| Mayor |
Oscar B. Goodman |
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Geographical characteristics |
| Total |
293.6
km² |
| Land |
293.5
km² |
| Water |
0.1
km² |
| Total (2005) |
575,973 |
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Metro area |
1,650,671 |
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Density |
1840.2/km² |
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Coordinates |
36°11′00″ N
115°13′00″ W |
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Elevation |
664
m |
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Time zone |
PST (UTC-8) |
| Summer (DST) |
PDT (UTC-7) |
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History
- Main article:
History of Las Vegas
Founding
Las Vegas was given its name by
Spaniards in the Antonio Armijo party, who used the water in the area while
heading north and west along the Old Spanish Trail from Texas. In the 1800s,
areas of the Las Vegas Valley contained artesian wells that supported extensive
green areas or Meadows (Vega in Spanish), hence the name Las Vegas.
John C. Frémont traveled into the Las Vegas Valley on May 3, 1844, while it was
still part of Mexico. He was a leader of a group of scientists, scouts and
observers for the United States Army Corps of Engineers. On May 10, 1855,
following annexation by the United States, Brigham Young assigned 30 Mormon
missionaries led by William Bringhurst to the area to convert the Paiute Indian
population. A Fort was built near the current downtown area, serving as a
stopover for travelers along the "Mormon Corridor" between Salt Lake and the
briefly thriving Mormon colony at San Bernardino, California. Las Vegas was
established as a railroad town on May 15, 1905, when 110 acres owned by Montana
Senator William A. Clark's San Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt Lake City Railroad,
was auctioned off in what is now downtown Las Vegas. Las Vegas was part of
Lincoln County until 1909 when it became part of the newly established Clark
County. Las Vegas became an incorporated city on March 16, 1911 when it
adopted its first charter.
Major events
Major events in Las Vegas' history include:
- Establishment of Las Vegas as a railroad town (May 15, 1905).
- Legalization of gambling (March 19, 1931).
- Completion of
Hoover Dam (October 9, 1936).
- Opening of
Bugsy Siegel's
Flamingo Hotel on what would become the
Las Vegas Strip (December 26, 1946).
- Atmospheric
nuclear testing (1951 to 1962).
- The floods of 1955, 1984, 1999, and 2003.
-
MGM Grand Hotel fire (November 21, 1980),
the worst disaster in Nevada history.
- Opening of
the
Mirage (November 22, 1989), which began the era of megaresort casinos.
- 100th birthday, or Centennial, of Las Vegas (May 15, 2005).
Economic history
Las Vegas started as a stopover on the pioneer trails to the west, and became
a popular railroad town in the early 1900s. It was a staging point for all the
mines in the surrounding area, especially from the town of Bullfrog, that
shipped their goods out to the country. With the growth of the railroads, Las
Vegas became less important, but the building of the Hoover Dam injected new
blood into Las Vegas and the city has never looked back. Federal dollars from
Hoover Dam
soon converted to tourist dollars after the dam was built. The increase in
tourism and the legalization of gambling led to the advent of the casino-hotels
for which Las Vegas is famous.
The constant stream of tourist dollars from the hotels and casinos was
augmented by a new source of federal money. This money came from the
establishment of what is now
Nellis Air Force Base. The influx of military personnel and casino
job-hunters helped start a land building boom which still goes on today.
Las Vegas has also benefitted from the economic woes of California, whose
high-tax, high-regulation business climate has caused companies desiring or
needing a West Coast presence to relocate to more business-friendly Nevada.
Law and government
The Lloyd D. George Federal District Courthouse in Las Vegas is the first
Federal Building built to the post-Oklahoma City blast resistant standards.
The
Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department provides most law enforcement
services in the city and surrounding county. Exceptions include cities with
their own law enforcement agency; including North Las Vegas, Henderson and
Boulder City.
Most of the people and businesses who call Las Vegas home actually live in
neighboring unincorporated communities that have no city government or in other
nearby cities, some of which are listed below. In fact, of the nearly 1.6
million people who live in the Las Vegas valley, only 575,973 live inside Las
Vegas city limits. The largest of these towns are Paradise (188,768) between Las
Vegas and
Henderson(224,829), Sunrise Manor (184,801) east of Las Vegas and North Las
Vegas, and Spring Valley (161,286) southwest of Las Vegas. These towns formed
during a 1940s water
dispute between the City of Las Vegas and early homeowners south of San
Francisco Street, now Sahara Avenue. Residents of these towns cannot vote for
the Mayor and City Council of Las Vegas, but they can vote for members of the
Clark County Commission, which governs their areas. They are also represented by
advisory boards, which are appointed by and give nonbinding suggestions to the
Clark County Commission.
The City of Las Vegas government operates as a
council-manager government. The Mayor sits as a Councilmember-At-Large and
presides over all of the City Council meetings. In the event that the Mayor
cannot preside over a City Council meeting the Mayor Pro-Tem is the presiding
body of the meeting until such time as the Mayor returns to his seat. The City
Manager is responsible for the administration and the day to day operation of
all of the municipal services and city departments. The City Manager also
maintains an intergovernmental relationships with federal, state, county and
other local governments.
A Paiute Indian reservation occupies about 1 acre (4,000 m²) in the downtown area of
Las Vegas.
City council
(Councilmembers'
official city websites are also available)
Oscar B. Goodman – Mayor and Councilmember at Large (Term Expires in 2007)
Gary Reese – Mayor Pro-Tem and 3rd Ward Councilmember (Term Expires in 2007)
Lois Tarkanian – 1st Ward Councilmember (Term Expires in 2007)¹
Steve Wolfson, Esq – 2nd Ward Councilmember (Term Expires in 2009)
Larry Brown – 4th Ward Councilmember (Term Expires in 2009)
Lawrence Weekly – 5th Ward Councilmember (Term Expires in 2007)
Steve Ross – 6th Ward Councilmember (Term Expires in 2009)
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- ¹ Elected on
January 26, 2005 in a special election to replace Councilwoman Janet Moncrief
when recalled from office. Lois Tarkanian will serve the remaining two
years of the Ward 1 seat.
City management
- Douglas Selby – City Manager
- Barbara Jo (Roni) Ronemus – City Clerk
Government offices
City of Las Vegas
Government Offices
400 Stewart Avenue
Las Vegas, NV 89101 |
Metropolitan Police Department
400 Stewart Avenue
Las Vegas, NV 89101 |
Detention Center (City jail)
(not
County Detention)
3200 Stewart Avenue
Las Vegas, NV 89101 |
Marriage licenses are filed at the
Clark County Courthouse.
Geography
Typical desert around the Las Vegas area.
Las Vegas is located at
36°11′39″N, 115°13′19″W (36.194168, 115.222060)GR1. According to the United
States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 293.6 km² (113.4 mi²). 293.5 km² (113.3 mi²) of it is land and 0.1 km² (0.1 mi²) of it is water. The
total area is 0.04% water.
The city is located in an arid basin surrounded by mountains varying in color
from pink to rust to gray. As befits a desert, much of the landscape is rocky
and dusty. Within the city, however, there are a great deal of lawns, trees, and
other greenery. Due to water resource issues, there is now a movement to
encourage xeriscaping instead of lawns. Another part of the water conservation efforts
include scheduled watering groups for watering residential landscaping.
Climate
Las Vegas' climate is typical of the
Mojave Desert, in which it is located, marked with hot summers, mild winters,
abundant sunshine year-round, and very little rainfall. Highs in the 90's are
common in the months of May, June, and September and temperatures normally
exceed 100 °F for several days in the months of July and August, but there is
very low humidity. The hottest temperature ever recorded is 117 °F set twice, on
July 19, 2005 at McCarran International Airport and July 24, 1942 at present-day
Nellis Air Force Base. Winters are cool and windy, with the majority of Las
Vegas' annual 4.49 in (114 mm) of rainfall coming from January to March. Winter
daytime highs are normally around 60 °F and winter nighttime lows are usually
around 40 °F. The coldest temperature ever recorded is 8 °F set on January 25,
1937 at present-day Nellis Air Force Base. Showers occur less frequently in the
Spring or Autumn. July through September, the Mexican Monsoon often brings
enough moisture from the Gulf of California across Mexico and into the southwest
to cause afternoon and evening thunderstorms. Although winter snow is usually
visible from December to May on the mountains surrounding Las Vegas, it rarely
snows in the city itself.
Demographics
City of Las Vegas
Population by year
[4] |
| 1930 |
5,165 |
| 1940 |
8,422 |
| 1950 |
24,624 |
| 1960 |
64,405 |
| 1970 |
125,787 |
| 1980 |
164,674 |
| 1990 |
258,295 |
| 2000 |
478,434 |
As of the censusGR2 of 2000, there are 478,434 people, 176,750 households,
and 117,538 families residing in the city. The population density is 1,630.3/km²
(4,222.5/mi²). There are 190,724 housing units at an average density of
649.9/km² (1,683.3/mi²). The racial makeup of the city is 69.86% White, 10.36%
African American, 0.75% Native American, 4.78% Asian, 0.45% Pacific Islander,
9.75% from other races, and 4.05% from two or more races. 23.61% of the
population are Hispanic or Latino of any race.
There are 176,750 households out of which 31.9% have children under the age
of 18 living with them, 48.3% are
married couples
living together, 12.2% have a female householder with no husband present, and
33.5% are non-families. 25.0% of all households are made up of individuals and
7.5% have someone living alone who is 65 years of age or older. The average
household size is 2.66 and the average family size is 3.20.
In the city the population is spread out with 25.9% under the age of 18, 8.8%
from 18 to 24, 32.0% from 25 to 44, 21.7% from 45 to 64, and 11.6% who are 65
years of age or older. The median age is 34 years. For every 100 females there
are 103.3 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there are 102.5 males.
The median income for a household in the city is $44,069, and the median
income for a family is $50,465. Males have a median income of $35,511 versus
$27,554 for females. The
per capita income for the city is $22,060. 11.9% of the population and 8.6% of
families are below the poverty line. Out of the total population, 15.4% of those under the age of 18 and
8.3% of those 65 and older are living below the poverty line.
As of the 2004 census estimate, the
Las Vegas metropolitan area contained over 1.6 million residents, and contains
the largest Hawaiian community, outside of Hawaii.
Economy
Interior of a casino. A major part of the city economy is based on tourism,
including gambling.
The primary drivers of the Las Vegas economy have been the confluence of
tourism, gaming, and conventions which in turn feed the retail and dining
industries. Several companies involved in the manufacture of electronic gaming
machines, such as slot machines, are located in the Las Vegas area. In the 2000s retail and
dining have become attractions of their own.
Las Vegas as the county seat and home to the
Lloyd D. George Federal District Courthouse, draws numerous legal service
industries providing bail, marriage, divorce, tax, incorporation and other legal services.
The redevelopment listed below shows how the city is trying to diversify the
local economy and revitalize the downtown area. The World Market Center is an
example of this.
City redevelopment
The south end of the
Las Vegas Strip in
2003.
When The
Mirage, the first Megaresort, opened in 1989, it started a
movement of people and construction away from downtown Las Vegas to the
Las Vegas Strip. This resulted in a drop in tourism from which the downtown
area is still trying to recover.
A concerted effort has been made by
city officials to diversify the Las Vegas economy from tourism by attracting
light manufacturing, banking, and other commercial interests. The lack of any
state individual or corporate income tax and very simple incorporation requirements have fostered the success of this effort.
Having been late to develop an urban core of any substantial size, Las Vegas
has retained very affordable real estate prices in comparison to nearby urban
centers. Consequently, the city has recently enjoyed an enormous boom both in
population and in tourism. However, as a
New York Times series on the city reported in 2004, the median price of
housing in the Las Vegas Valley is now at or above the nationwide median. The
urban area has grown outward so quickly that it is beginning to run into the
Bureau of Land Management holdings along its edges, increasing land values
enough that medium- and high-density development is beginning to occur closer to
the core.
As a reflection of the city's rapid growing population, the new
Chinatown of Las Vegas was constructed in the early 1990s on Spring Mountain
Road. Chinatown initially consisted of only one large shopping center complex,
but the area was recently expanded for new shopping centers that contain various
Asian businesses.
Downtown Las Vegas: The Fremont Street Experience outside of
Binion's Horseshoe Casino.
With the Strip expansion in the
1990s, downtown
Las Vegas began to suffer. The
Fremont Street Experience (FSE) was built in an effort to draw tourists
downtown. While greatly slowing the decline, it did not stop the decline in
tourism and revenue. The multi-level
Neonopolis, complete with food court and theaters, was built to offer more
retail and services downtown. While there have been changes in ownership and
management, Neonopolis has not been able to lease all the space available. As of March 2005,
the property is for sale.
The city purchased 61 ac
(247,000 m²) of property from
Union Pacific Railroad during the 1990s with the goal of creating something that
would draw tourists and locals to the downtown area. Las Vegas Mayor Oscar
Goodman has announced plans for the Union Park Development which will include
residential and office high-rises, The Lou Ruvo Alzheimer's Institute, an
academic medical center, The Fred W. and Mary B. Smith Center for the Performing
Arts, a new City Hall and a possible baseball stadium. After failed negotiations
with The Related Co. on the development of Union Park in October of 2005, San
Diego-based Newland Communities was chosen by the city as the new development
firm. The Newland contract calls for Dan Van Epp, Newland's regional vice
president and former president of the Howard Hughes Corp., to oversee his
company's work on Union Park. The $50-million Lou Ruvo Alzheimer's Institute
designed by architect Frank Gehry is expected to break ground in August of 2006.[5]
The city council of Las Vegas has agreed on zoning changes on Fremont Street,
which allows bars to be closer together duplicating efforts of similar cities,
like the
Gaslamp Quarter of San Diego. It is expected that this change will bring more tourism and
business to the downtown area.
In the early 2000s, some promising signs emerged for downtown Las Vegas. The
city successfully lured the Internal Revenue Service to move operations from
outside the city limits to a new building downtown that opened in April 2005.
The IRS is expected to create a demand for additional businesses in the area, epecially in the daytime hours.
Another promising sign of development has come in the form of
high-rise development. A substantial increase in the number of high-rises under
construction and proposed in Las Vegas began in 2003 and has continued into
2006. New Condominum and hotel high rise projects have caused the entire Las Vegas
skyline to change dramatically in recent years. Many large projects are planned
for downtown Las Vegas as well as the
Las Vegas Strip including the largest privately financed development
proposed in the United States-
Project City Center. It is expected that high rise condominium development
will transform the downtown area into a vibrant
urban center, and
change the demographics of the
Las Vegas Strip by adding residential elements to tourist areas.
Las Vegas from space
In 2005, on a lot adjacent to the city's 61 ac (247,000 m²), the World Market
Center opened. It is intended to be the nation's and possibly the world's
preeminent furniture wholesale showroom and marketplace, and is meant to compete
with the current furniture market capital of High Point, North Carolina.
In 2004, the city partnered with Cheetah Wireless Technologies and
MeshNetwork to pilot a wide area mobile broadband system. The pilot system
is installed downtown, around the Fremont Street Experience.
Transportation
The
CAT Bus is a popular means of public transportation among locals and
tourists with various bus routes covering a large portion of the valley. The CAT
system carries approximately 175,000 people per weekday, or about 10% of the
Valley's population. Ridership on the system has been increasing rapidly since
the summer of 2005, when a combination of high gas prices and service
improvements began attracting more riders. A need for increased frequency and
new routes caused by the tremendous growth in the Valley stretches the system's
resources.
The
Las Vegas Monorail runs from the
MGM Grand Hotel at the south end of the Strip to the
Sahara Hotel at the north end of the Strip.
The street numbering system is divided by the following streets:
- Westcliff Drive, US-95 Expressway, Fremont Street and Charleston
Boulevard divides the north-south block numbers from west to east.
- Las Vegas Boulevard divides the east-west streets from the Las Vegas
Strip to near the Stratosphere, then Main Street becomes the dividing line
from the Stratosphere to the North Las Vegas border, after which the
Goldfield Street alignment officially divides east and west.
McCarran International Airport provides commercial flights into the Las
Vegas valley. The airport also serves private aircraft, domestic and
international passenger flights, and freight/cargo flights. Although
general aviation traffic flies into McCarran International, other airstrips are available.
Intercity bus service to Las Vegas is provided by traditional intercity bus
carriers, including
Greyhound; many charter services, including Green Tortoise; and several
Chinatown bus lines.
Las Vegas from
U.S. Highway 93
Primary roadways into and out of Las Vegas include
I-15
(north towards
Salt Lake City, Utah, and south towards San Diego and Los Angeles, California,
and other points in Southern California), US 93 (north towards Ely, Nevada and
Jackpot, Nevada, and south towards Kingman, Arizona) and US 95 (north towards
Reno and south towards Searchlight, Nevada), providing access to Interstates I-80 and I-40.
Until 1997, the Amtrak Desert Wind train service ran through Las Vegas using
the Union Pacific Railroad (UP) rails that run through the city; Amtrak service
to Las Vegas has since been replaced by Amtrak's Thruway Motorcoach bus service.
Plans to restore Los Angeles to Las Vegas Amtrak service using a Talgo train
have been discussed since the Desert Wind was discontinued. As of 2005, however, no such service has been established.
Union Pacific Railroad (UP) is the only class one railroad to provide rail
freight service to the city.
Culture and attractions
The city and surrounding areas offer many
attractions for both visitors and locals to enjoy.
Not having a major league sports team does not mean there is a lack of
sports activities in the area. There are also many options for boating, golf,
hiking, rock climbing, and parks which offer a wide range of activities.
The
University of Nevada, Las Vegas fields Division I athletic teams and the NCAA
football Las Vegas Bowl call the city home.
The
Las Vegas Motor Speedway (LVMS), just north of the city hosts NASCAR and
other automotive events.
There are multiple sports teams: the
Las Vegas Gladiators in the
Arena Football League, the
Las
Vegas 51s, a baseball franchise in the Triple A
Pacific Coast League, and the Las Vegas Wranglers of the ECHL hockey league.
However, due to illegal gambling risks, none of the major professional sports
leagues have ever had a team in Las Vegas, though the possibility of relocating
a team to or adding a team in Las Vegas has came up on more than one occasion.
Las Vegas is frequently depicted in film and television:
Sister cities
Las Vegas has four
sister cities, as designated by Sister Cities International, Inc. (SCI): Angeles
City (Pampanga, Philippines), An San (South Korea), Huludao (China), and Phuket
(Thailand).
External links
Las Vegas
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