Las Vegas
MGM Grand Las Vegas
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MGM Grand Las Vegas
3799 Las Vegas Boulevard South
Las Vegas, Nevada 89109 |
| Number of rooms |
5,034 |
| Theme |
Hollywood's Golden Age |
| Gaming space |
171,500 ft² (15,932.87 m²) |
| Permanent show(s) |
KÀ
La Femme |
| Signature attraction(s) |
Boxing
Lion Habitat
CBS Television City
Tabu
Teatro EuroBar
Rainforest Café
Studio 54 |
| Notable restaurant(s) |
Emeril's
Nobhill
Pearl
Fiamma
Craftsteak
Seablue
Diego
Shibuya |
| Owner |
MGM Mirage |
| Date opened |
December 18,
1993 |
| Casino type |
Land |
| Major renovation(s) |
N/A |
| Previous name(s) |
MGM-Marina (demolished)
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| Casino website |
MGM Grand Las Vegas Website |
The MGM Grand Las Vegas opened in
1993 in
Las Vegas, Nevada,
United States, as a
Hollywood themed resort. It has 5,044 rooms, 3,153 of which are no smoking, making it the largest hotel in the world. It also houses a
casino,
numerous shops and night clubs, and an arena that is a major concert venue. It
is owned and operated by the
MGM Mirage
company.
The building is 293 feet (89 m) high, with 30 floors, five outdoor pools, a
380,000 square foot (35,000 m²)
convention center, the
MGM Grand Arena,
CBS Television City, and the Grand Spa. The casino at 171,500 square feet
(16,000 m²) is the largest in Las Vegas.
The Lion Habitat in the MGM Grand
The
Tropicana - Las Vegas Boulevard intersection, where the MGM Grand is
located, is extremely busy. Pedestrians are not allowed to cross at street
level. Instead, the MGM Grand is linked by overhead pedestrian bridges to its
neighboring casinos: to the south across Tropicana Avenue, the
Tropicana, and to the west across the Strip, the
New York-New York.
History
Before the current MGM Grand was built, another hotel known as the
MGM Grand was located about a mile (1.5 km) north on the
Las Vegas Strip. That site is now occupied by
Bally's Hotel & Casino.
In 1990
Kirk Kerkorian bought the Marina Hotel to obtain the site that would become the home of the MGM Grand.
During that time, the Marina was known as the MGM-Marina Hotel.
When the latest MGM Grand opened on
December 18, 1993, it was owned by MGM Grand Inc. At that time it had an
extensive Wizard of Oz theme, including the green "Emerald City" color of the
building and the decorative use of Wizard of Oz memorabilia.
Originally, the main entrance on the Strip was inside the mouth of a giant
cartoonish lion, but this entrance feature was quickly changed to a more
traditional entrance as it was learned that some Asian gamblers were avoiding
the casino due to the cultural view of entering the mouth of a lion as "bad
luck" (stemming from the phrase "sending a sheep into a lion's [or tiger's]
mouth", which implies that a person can be shaken down and there is nothing
anyone can do about it) A large golden lion statue was added above the entrance
to keep with the MGM Lion theme while not offending their more superstitious
guests.
The MGM lion guards the entrance to the MGM Grand Las Vegas.
When the MGM Grand opened, it included the Grand Adventures
theme park behind the casino. The plan was to make Las Vegas more "family
friendly" by providing activities for children who were too young to gamble. The
theme park performed poorly, and did not reopen for the 2001 season. On December
5, 2002, MGM Mirage announced that the former theme park would be developed as a
luxury condominium and hotel complex.
In 2000, in an attempt to appeal to a more mature clientele, the hotel
underwent a major renovation and almost all traces of the "Oz" theme were
removed. The theme is now more of the
Art Deco era of classic Hollywood and the hotel started billing itself as The
City of Entertainment. A monorail was built using old trains from the Walt
Disney World Resort to connect the MGM Grand to
Bally's. The track was extended and became the
Las Vegas Monorail. The station was
refurbished and the trains were replaced with Bombardier
M-VI's.
External links
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