Las Vegas – w sto lat od pustyni do imperium hotelarskiego
Streszczenie
In times of far reaching changes and development in the hospitality industry
within the last decade (mergers, takeovers, expansion) it seemed of value to do
research on one of its most interesting examples. Though Las Vegas, its image
and rapid evolution to a capital of casino hotels, are all well known to the
scientific discipline of hospitality they hardly ever have been analyzed in Poland.
Out of the simple awareness of the existence of casino hotels in such concentration and scale arose the necessity of a very close approach towards
the processes and factors that influenced and drove the city to its today’s
appearance. Las Vegas can prove itself of only but exactly one century of history
as a city but has grown to a size of 535 thousands inhabitants (1.6 Million in the
metropolitan area) with 131 000 hotel rooms. The in July 2004 conducted
research focuses on the most representative parts of the city meaning the Las
Vegas Blvd. (the Strip) and Downtown.
Receiving city rights in 1905 after nearly 150 years of insignificant past as
oasis and Mormon mission Las Vegas served in its very beginning as a kind of a
refuge for gamblers and railroad developers. Although the land surrounding the
railroad installations, workshops and sidings was sold in one day, laying ground
to a new city, it needed over 25 years until obscure gambling shacks and halls
started their transformation into casino hotels. Legalized gambling in the State of
Nevada prepared the ground for opening casinos, but the construction of the
Hoover Dam on the Colorado River in 1931 set off the first major development in
the city.
The first small gambling halls which were situated in Downtown became
casino hotels over the years. The initial ground parcellation from 1905 which
divided the terrain of the city center in squares not bigger than 256 to 366 feet
soon became to small and narrow for further expansion. Therefore the existing
casinos were limited to maximum one city block. Unclaimed terrain south of the
city limits still offered lots of space in the 1940s for the city itself grew mainly to
the north and north-west. With gambling legal in Nevada and the fast growing
Las Vegas new investors appeared who represented a different marketing
strategy from just running a casino with hotel rooms. Their idea was a resort
casino hotel. It was to create a hotel by operating a casino but also creating a
place for refuge and relaxation in the unwelcoming desert on the way from Salt
Lake City to Los Angeles. The predecessor was El Rancho (1942), followed by
the Flamingo (1946). Slowly a tendency in creating themed resorts became
apparent. The 1950s meant a boom for the street which became known as The
Strip and which is part of the Highway 91 linking Salt Lake City and Los Angeles.
More and more casino resorts received a themed interior decoration. The in
1972 opened Circus Circus was the first casino hotel to become a fully themed
resort and regarding a substantial increase in funds invested from then on to
open a casino resort, as well as the size of the property and the scale of an
enterprise, it marked the beginning of a new era on the Strip: the era of the
megaresort.
In the 1940s the casinos along the Strip counted between 100 and 300
rooms. One can speak of the first phase of Strip exploration between the later
Sahara Ave.-Sands Ave. The 1950s are characteristic through a large number of
low capacity casinos all along the Strip occupying most of the available land.
The casinos’ capacity is rather initial so the process can be called a subphase of
exploration. The 1960s are the second exploration phase by developing the Strip between Sands Ave. and Flamingo Rd. with a concentration around the Strip-
-Flamingo Rd. crossroads and strengthening and increasing the capacity within
the first exploration area. The on following decade (1971–1980) – the initiation of
the megaresort era – is significant through a strong capacity increase in the
areas of the two first phases exceeding 1000 rooms per casino in area I and
2000 per casino in area II. The years 1981–1990 signalize an imminent third
exploration phase around the Strip-Tropicana Ave. crossroads by an
augmentation in the average hotel room number per resort and by extending the
Strip to the north to Main Street. The first casino hotel with more than 3000
rooms (The Mirage) was opened during that period. The years 1991–2000 are
significant through the opening of a large number of high capacity resorts with
over 2000 rooms (Luxor, New York New York), over 3000 rooms (Treasure
Island, Monte Carlo, Bellagio, Mandalay Bay, Venetian, Paris Las Vegas), more
than 4000 and 5000 rooms (respectively Excalibur and MGM Grand) from
Flamingo Rd. to Tropicana Ave and on to Koval Ln. During the years 2001–2005
the dynamics of the Strip exploration seems to be weakening. The major
hospitality investments in this time were the enlargement of the Stratosphere
and opening of the new Wynn Las Vegas. No signs of further development south
of Mandalay Bay can be determined at this time.
In the today’s Las Vegas hospitality concentrates strongly around the South
Strip and with less intensity around the North Strip. Analyzing the city’s
hospitality development during at least the last 70 years a clearly south-directed
exploration is being revealed with a divergence in development between
Downtown and the Strip. The reasons might be as mentioned above: the lack of
space for expansion in the densely developed Downtown. The Strip counts 70
135 rooms out of the city’s 131 000 and Downtown has them only 7895.
Included charts show the comparative figures of the two hospitality development
areas in Las Vegas. An interesting aspect is the undertaking of measures for
creating a large reception base for congress tourists. Meeting amenities of the
Strip resorts successfully compete with the Las Vegas Convention Center which
is of the largest buildings in the world for conference and exhibition purposes.
After having presented in short words the major phases of the Las Vegas
development, a brief characteristic of the city as it is today: as a city of a little bit
more than 1.5 Million inhabitants in the metro area it has one of the largest
hospitality potential in the world. It receives yearly three fourths of tourists
visiting a middle-sized country in Central East Europe (based on Poland 2004,
37.3 Million in Las Vegas in the same year) and it has nearly twice the hotel
capacity at its disposal (based on Poland 2004). The terrorist attack from
9.11.2001 which meant a world tourism recession for months had almost no
negative impact on the tourist flow in Las Vegas. They caused of course
a decrease in occupancy rates and threw back revenues from hospitality, but at
the end of 2001 the situation was back to normal. This proves the economic
stability of Las Vegas, which development in hospitality has been slowing down during the past years but means no substantial decrease or crisis to the city.
A SWOT analysis of the current situation combined with ranking the city’s
tourism and hospitality status within a BCG matrix reveals its clear leader
position on the market. A prognosis for the future may be despite the slowed
down and even stagnating development a continuous success in hospitality.
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