Luxor Hotel

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Luxor Hotel

Number of rooms 4,407
Theme Ancient Egypt
Gaming space 120,000 ft² (11,148 m²)
Permanent show(s) Carrot Top
Fantasy
Signature attraction(s) IMAX
Notable restaurant(s) Luxor Steakhouse
Fusia
Owner MGM Mirage
Date opened October 15, 1993
Casino type Land-Resort
Major renovation(s) West & East Towers (1,948 rooms) in 2006
Previous name(s) None
Casino website luxor.com
The view inside the Luxor.  The large black shape is the IMAX theater.
Enlarge
The view inside the Luxor. The large black shape is the IMAX theater.

The Luxor Hotel is a hotel casino located on the famed Las Vegas Strip in Las Vegas, Nevada, United States, and was one of the resort city's first fully-themed megaresorts. Ground was broken for the Luxor in 1991, the same year that construction began on the Treasure Island and the current MGM Grand. It has an Ancient Egyptian motif and contains a total of 4,407 rooms lining the interior walls of a hollow pyramid and contained within two twin ziggurat towers. It opened on October 15, 1993.

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[edit] Location & History

It is located on the southern end of the Las Vegas Strip, opposite McCarran International Airport. The resort is flanked by the Mandalay Bay to the south and by the Excalibur to the north; all three are connected by free express and local trams. All three properties were built by Mandalay Resort Group, formerly known as Circus Circus Enterprises. In June 2004, the Mandalay Resort Group was purchased by MGM Mirage, adding this hotel to its vast array of properties on the "Strip". It can be considered the "middle child" of Mandalay's south strip properties, both in terms of age (it opened in 1993; the Excalibur opened in 1990, while Mandalay Bay opened in 1999) and level of luxury.

When the resort opened, it featured a more heavily Egyptian-themed interior, including a slow-moving water flume ride that would circle around the casino level grounds and carry guests to their inclinator core at the corners of the pyramid. The ancient Egypt motif was scaled back and the boat rides removed as part of a campaign to tailor the property towards more upscale tastes.

The resort has been home to some very popular entertainment attractions in Las Vegas. The main level featured the nightclub, RA, which closed indefinitely on July 22, 2006. From 2000 to 2005, the Luxor Theatre was the home of the enormously popular performance-art show Blue Man Group, which has since moved to The Venetian. On February 15, 2006, the main theatre became the home of the musical Hairspray. The final Hairspray show was on June 11, 2006.

In 2006, MGM-Mirage began renovating Luxor. Rooms in the East and West Towers have been refurnished. Two upscale restaurants, Isis and Sacred Sea Room, closed. The RA nightclub, which had previously been one of the most successful in the city but had been seeing reduced attendance in recent years, was shuttered. Advertising at RA's former entrance currently promotes that LAX, a Los Angeles nightclub, will be opening a Las Vegas branch at the hotel. Also advertised yet unopened is a restaurant named Aspen 702.

Illusionist Criss Angel signed a deal in 2006 to film episodes of his TV series Mindfreak at the hotel. It is currently rumored that he will also be involved in a show production for the Luxor Theatre.

[edit] Design

The Luxor is among the most recognizable hotels on the strip because of its striking design. Designed by renowned hotel architect Veldon Simpson, the main portion of the hotel is a 350-foot-high (106 meters), 30-story pyramid of black glass (in comparison, the Great Pyramid of Giza tops out at 450 ft, or 137 m). The hotel is marked by a large obelisk with the name of the property in lighted letters, while the porte-cochere travels underneath a massive recreation of the Great Sphinx of Giza.

The tip of the pyramid contains a fixed-position spotlight that points directly upward – it is the brightest beam in the world, and is visible from anywhere in the Las Vegas valley at night, and can be seen at flight level from above Los Angeles, California, over 275 miles (440 km) away. In the spring, the bright light attracts huge numbers of moths into the light beam, creating a phenomenon that has been likened to snow. The beam is currently powered by 39 Xenon lamps operating at 7 kilowatts each at an hourly operating cost of $53 (lamps, repairs, and electricity costs). The beam's output is rated at 41.5 gigacandela. Ironically, because the desert air is so clean and dry there is little to deflect the light, the beam's true brightness is lost to all observers except for unfortunate airline pilots flying overhead.

[edit] Guest Rooms and Attractions

The guest rooms are situated on the outer walls of the pyramid and are reached by riding in so-called "inclinators" that travel along the inner surface of the pyramid at a 39-degree angle. Open hallways leading to the rooms overlook the atrium, which is the largest in the world at 29 million cubic feet (820,000 m³).

Sphinx guarding the hotel entrance
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Sphinx guarding the hotel entrance

An IMAX theatre (the first such theatre in Las Vegas, although in 1979, Caesars Palace opened an Omnimax Theater, the precursor to IMAX[1]) shows a rotating selection of films; there is also an IMAX motion simulator ride hosting a variety of rides, including "In Search of the Obelisk," which takes participants into a virtual archeological dig and ReBoot, based on the animated series. The "Atrium Showroom" is home to multiple shows: "Fantasy" (a topless revue), comedian Carrot Top, and the movie/attraction "Pirates 4D". The attractions level also features the "King Tut Museum", an authentic replica of the tomb of Pharaoh Tutankhamun. The reproduction is based directly on the descriptions of the tomb recorded by Howard Carter, who discovered it in 1922.

[edit] Hotel Name and Usage in Recent Culture

The hotel is named after the city of Luxor (ancient Thebes) in Egypt, the site of the Valley of the Kings, Karnak and Luxor Temples, and scores of other pharaonic monuments — but no pyramids.

This destination hotel is commonly viewed as one of the finest examples of 1990s Postmodern architecture, and appeared on the cover of renowned architecture scholar James Steele's book "Architecture Today".

A portion of the 1998 music video Gettin' Jiggy Wit It by Will Smith was shot in the foyer of the hotel.

[edit] External links


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Annual Revenue: $6.48 billion USD | Employees: 70,000+ | Stock Symbol: NYSE: MGM | Website: www.mgm-mirage.com

Coordinates: 36°05′44″N, 115°10′33″W