Cultural Tourism in Las Vegas: Would it work?

According to Wikipedia:

'Cultural tourism' (or culture tourism) is the subset of tourism concerned with a country or region's culture, especially its arts. It generally focuses on traditional communities who have diverse customs, unique form of art and distinct social practices, which basically distinguishes it from other types/forms of culture. Cultural tourism includes tourism in urban areas, particularly historic or large cities and their cultural facilities such as museums and theatres

One of the things we discussed at lunch last Saturday was Cultural Tourism in Las Vegas.  In a city that has marketed itself as America's Playground for almost 60 years now is it any wonder that the majority of people who visit or just moved here have no clue that we have cultural spots like museums and art galleries.

Well, Las Vegas is filled with museums, art galleries and lots of history.  But those places almost never get advertised by the Las Vegas Convention Authority, the Nevada Tourism Office, the City or the County.  Is the LVCVA that worried that tourists might actually leave the Las Vegas Strip for a few hours to soak up some history and never come back to the black jack tables?  Must everything that promotes Las Vegas be about excessive drinking, smoking or snarky behavior that you regret the next day?

The City and the mayor, in particular, keep trying to promote Fremont Street and downtown Las Vegas as a tourist mecca.  But one of the endearing qualities of Fremont Street is the history of the area.

Why in a town of 2.4 million people, in a city that is barely 103 years old is it so difficult to find historic neighborhoods, driving tour maps or even information about walking tours?

You can go to small towns through-out this country and they all seem to promote their history.  From large cities such as New York City and Los Angeles to small communities in the Sierra Nevadas to the shores of Cape Cod, you can find historic districts with docents willing to answer questions, maps to museums, art galleries and other significant cultural sites worth visiting.

I think Cultural Tourism is a natural fit for Las Vegas.  We have museums for everything from our Natural History to Atomic Testing, the Clark County Museum has Heritage Street filled with homes and buildings moved from around the Las Vegas Valley, the Nevada State Museum covers our archaeological history to our Post-War history with new showings for artists every 90 days.  The Las Vegas Springs Preserve has walking tours, a flash flood simulation and exhibits about the importance of water not only to our past but to our future.

These are wonderful museums, many of them with state-of-the-art exhibits.

There is a Cultural Corridor and an Arts District.  And there is Fremont Street and the surrounding area with many of its original or second generation buildings still standing behind new facades. 

New York City has Broadway, Los Angeles  has the Sunset Strip and Hollywood Blvd, San Francisco has many significant streets of historic interest.  Fremont Street is our equivalent.  Yes, it's filled with girly joints and gaming casinos and tee-shirt stores but behind all those facades is real history dating back to our roots.  Behind the facade that is Binions is the Hotel Apache and, on the western corner behind the facade,  pieces of the beloved Mint Sign, beneath the facade of the La Bayou is Mayme Stoecker's Northern Club and Wilbur Clark's Monte Carlo Club.  The Pioneer Club has Vegas Vic and beneath its facade the original building when it was Beckley's Store for Men. 

There is real history on Fremont Street.  It was our Main Street, USA with a strange and wonderful twist to it.  It evolved over the years from the heart of our community to Glitter Gulch to the Fremont Street Experience of today.  But beneath the canopy and despite all the development and the disregard for the homes and the small shops and the mom and pop businesses that co-existed alongside the gaming halls, lies our history just waiting to be explored not only by us but by tourists as well. 

Not everyone that comes to Las Vegas comes to gamble and indulge in excesses they may regret in the morning.  Families come here bringing their children to visit their grandparents, friends from around the country and around the world come here to visit friends they went to school with when they were young or went to college with or have been friends with for more years than they can remember.  The bottom line is they would probably love to know that there is more to Las Vegas than just gambling, drinking and what happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas.  But they rarely get that chance to explore the cultural side of Las Vegas because the vast majority of people who have moved here in the last 20 years don't know there is culture in Las Vegas. 

Why is it so difficult to find this information when visiting Las Vegas?

How do we get the city we love to take Cultural Tourism seriously, especially in the downtown area where so much of the city's early history still exists (but is threatened on a daily basis by development)

If you have any ideas, please respond.  I would love to get a dialog going about cultural tourism and how to make it work.

 

Report on the History Preservation Summit

Saturday afternoon was great!  A number of preservationists:  Courtney Mooney repping the City's Office of Historic Preservation, Richard Hooker from City Cultural Affairs, Historic Preservation Commissioner Bob Stoldal, Westside historian Trish Geran, News Bureau curator Brian Paco Alvarez, Ellen Leigh from the Atomic Testing Museum, Mary-Margaret and Cary Stratton from the Atomic Age Alliance, Dennis McBride from the Nevada State Museum, Las Vegas, Jack LeVine and Mary Joy Alderman from VeryVintageVegas, Neighborhood Association leader Pam Hartley, Joel Rosales from LeavingLV.net and yours truly all converged on the Boulder Hotel in beautiful Boulder City to meet for lunch and to talk with Preservation Action director, Heather MacIntosh.

We learned a number of things about how PreservationAction can help us with preservation issues here in Las Vegas. PreservationAction helps with grass-roots efforts and networking.  Heather was quite excited about the possibilities here in Southern Nevada and also very helpful on how we can learn from other western cities that are already ahead of us in terms of historic preservation.

Unfortunately, not all the local groups were there.  Missing were reps from the County Museum, the Neon Museum, the Mob Museum, the Liberace Museum and the Preservation Association of Clark County.

Courtney Mooney is trying to organize an all-day Preservation Summit where all the groups can come together, learn more about what each group is doing and hopefully start working together to pool our energies.  We can't expect the rest of the Valley to take Preservation seriously unless we start talking as one voice.  This will also help us work more effectively with PreservationAction.  Everyone at this meeting plans to be there and we hope the other groups around the Valley will join us.

How can you help?  Get involved.  Join a group like Friends of Classic Las Vegas and help us to continue to bring attention to preservation issues across the Valley.  We have some great ideas for bringing attention to the destruction happening around the old High School and the auto courts on East Fremont among other issues.  Your help is needed and this gives you an opportunity to have a voice in helping to save and preserve our history.

For more information on becoming a member click here

 

The Big Empire, the Huntridge and a Preservation Summit

Well, the tempature is creeping back up towards 100, so that can only mean there must be lots of activities this weekend.

This afternoon I am giving a tour of Historic Fremont Street to the Big Empire.  Every Joone these lovers of Classic Las Vegas converge in town for their annual Soiree, courtesy of Matt Weatherford.  They are a great bunch and I am looking forward to seeing them again.

Tomorrow in Boulder City is a historic preservation summit.  Many of the historic preservation groups, Friends of Classic Las Vegas, Atomic Age Alliance, VeryVintageVegas, as well as city and county officials will be there.  Heather MacIntosh, from Washington DC, will be there to talk more about her group PreservationAction.org and how we can possibly all work together.

Tomorrow night is dinner with the Big Empire group followed by a party at Dr. Lonnie Hammergren's house where he will be unveiling his new Howard Hughes collection.

I'll report back with all the fun and all the facts.

Earlier this week, the Save the Huntridge Community Group leaders (Brian Paco Alvarez, Parm Hartley, Jack LeVine and myself) met with Huntridge owner, Eli Mizrachil.

Eli took a road trip a few weeks ago to Ventura Blvd in the San Fernando Valley of Southern California.  In Studio City he saw the La Reina theater.  This former S. Charles Lee designed theater closed back in the late 1980s.  It had a beautiful marquee filled with neon and a box office straight out of a movie set.  The theater underwent an adaptive re-use in the early 1990s when it became a Bookstar.  After the 1994 Northridge earthquake, it suffered some damage and had to be retrofitted.  Today it is a major day spa surrounded by various retail stores and restaurants.

I mention all this because seeing the La Reina inspired Eli to think outside the box.  His plans for the Huntridge are amazing.  He ties all three buildings (the former theater, the former bank/mattress store and the former Post Office) quite elegantly.  The lobby of the theater would be the flow-through where people could access the courtyard in the back.  The second story of the theater would become professional office space.  Below would be a mix of retail and restaurants.

The building would be saved, the pylon would be saved and the neon would be restored and relit atop the pylon.

In front, facing Charleston Blvd, would be two pads for a fast-food type place and a Starbucks type place.  Both would be done in the architecture of streamline-moderne to accent the main building.

Eli and his team are hoping to have an unveiling of these plans on First Friday next month.  We will keep you posted about the when and where.

In the meantime, this is, by far, the best idea that we have seen for the Huntridge so far.  It has the power to not only re-energize the building but the entire neighborhood surrounding it.

Here's hoping! 

Las Vegas Springs Preserve 1st Anniversary Party

By now most of you know that we are big fans of the Las Vegas Springs Preserve and not just because of the "Untold Stories" series we do there.   It is an incredible preservation project that charts the history of water in Southern Nevada and we believe in the path they are on.

This Sunday, June 8th, the Springs is celebrating its first anniversary with all you  can eat ice cream and more.  Over a year ago in this very blog we suggested that some sharp promoter should book The Pickadillos and Killian's Angels on the same bill.

Well, the Spring's Jodi Molever is that sharp promoter and has done just that.  This Sunday, if you don't go for the $6 admission fee or the free ice cream, go for some incredible music from two of the best local bands in Las Vegas.

The Pickadillos perform at:

12:40 - 1:30

3:45 - 4:30

You won't be disappointed.

Here's more info:

Since opening in June 2007, the Las Vegas Springs Preserve has entertained and educated hundreds of thousands of visitors with Grammy-winning artists, award-winning exhibits and a vision for a sustainable future. With 180 acres of LEED-certified building designs, museums, botanical gardens, galleries, trails and entertainment venues, the Springs Preserve has become a cultural hub for locals as well as for tourists seeking an off-Strip experience.

To celebrate a successful first year, the Springs Preserve will host an All-You-Can-Eat Ice Cream Festival on Sunday, June 8 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Activities will include improv comedy by Second City, live music by Killian's Angels and The Pickadillos, performances by Sharon Lynn's Celtic Storm Dancers, plus behind-the-scenes tours and opportunities to see the Springs Preserve's award-winning architecture. Tickets are $6 and include admission to the museums and galleries.

Keeping sustainability and conservation in mind, in its first year, the Springs Preserve:

  • Produced enough electricity from its 2,200 solar panels to power about 80 homes for a whole year
  • Saved 2,500 cubic yards of landfill space by coordinating, with the support of many community partners, the recycling and mulching of 19,000 Christmas trees
  • Saved more than 1 million gallons of water by using artificial grass in place of sod in the 2,000-seat outdoor amphitheatre

As well, the Springs Preserve has been home to a variety of amazing events including the Winter Lights Festival, Cirque du Soleil 5K Run and 1 Mile Fun Walk, World Water Day, Southern Nevada Cultural History Fair and Christmas Tree Recycling Program. The next year will bring many new and exciting happenings including the opening of the Nevada State Museum, a Haunted Harvest Festival and much more.

This event is made possible in part by the generosity of our community partners: Anderson Dairy, Whole Foods and AV Vegas.

You'll find us hanging around the stage listening to the second set of the Pickadillos.  Stop on by and enjoy the day with us!