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Crown Las Vegas Aims to be Tallest Building


Crown Las Vegas Aims to be Tallest BuildingPBL, the company behind the upcoming Crown Las Vegas, filed papers recently with the Clark County planning commission outlining their plans for the luxury property, which will have 5,000 rooms, along with retail, restaurants, gaming, spa and convention center space. But most noteworthy about these plans, as you can see from the artist rendering to the left, is that the resort would literally tower over the rest of the Strip.

According to the plans, PBL intends for the building to be 142 floors, or 1888 feet tall. That’s more than 700-feet taller than the Stratosphere and 400 feet taller than America’s tallest building, the Sears Tower in Chicago.

Of course, with current construction on mega-skyscrapers ranging from the Chicago Spire (2000 feet) to the Burj Dubai (over 3000 feet), the Crown wouldn’t be the tallest building in the world by the time it opens, but it certainly would be in the top ten.

PBL claims the design of the tower is meant to establish the resort as an iconic Vegas building and will offer restaurants, an observation floor and an outdoor terrace on the top floors.

The FAA could put a squash on the plans, though. They have lodged a complaint against the project, claiming the height of the building would create a flight hazard to the Las Vegas airport to the south and that anything over 700 feet is unacceptable.

Visually, the building would definitely stand out along the Vegas skyline. But I’ve been in the Sears Tower and it took a five minute elevator ride and an ear pop to get to the observation deck.

Considering how long it can take to get from the room to the casino floor at most current megaresorts, do you really want to factor in the extra time to get from floor 100-something to the main floor? And what about the safety exits? I don’t care how in shape you are, that many floors of stairs will definitely wind you. Not to mention, if the Crown Las Vegas is allowed to be that tall, then it opens the doors to more incredibly tall buildings, and the next thing you know, the Strip looks like Hong Kong - all skyscrapers and no view.

What do you think? Should PBL be allowed to build their 142-story building on the Strip? Would you stay there if it opened?


By Michelle Snow | Permalink


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Comments

Mike Evans | August 5th, 2007 at 8:18 pm
top comment

I’m not sure a 1,888 foot tower would be a good idea for the Strip. With all the new hotels that are being built, the view of the Vegas strip is already in danger of being lost by a forest of new towers.

If you let one as tall as the Crown Las Vegas be built, what’s to stop others reaching just as high? Once you get into that game, then you end up with a series of towers that look like they could be in any other city in the world - in other words, Vegas loses its uniqueness.

Besides, you’ve already got the Stratosphere if you want great views, and that hasn’t exactly been a great success over the years. Tall towers don’t work well in Vegas - sprawling resorts do.

Rick McVey | August 13th, 2007 at 3:44 pm
top comment

I don’t think it’s worth the time to be built in Las Vegas. It would alter the strip, and it would be a hassle to get to the Casino and back down a hundred more feet to my hotel room. Vegas is not Skyscraper city

P.S I don’t mind if it was built somewhere else in the U.S

Bruce Curtis | August 27th, 2007 at 7:37 pm
top comment

With something so tall, so close to KLAS airport, has anybody thought about the risk? This would raise the risk of terrorism, and certainly the risk of an accidental collision, whenever the weather is below visual minimums. Heck, the airport could be in visual conditions and the top 888 feet of this building still be hidden in clouds.

Building something so tall, so close to a busy airport? Dumb idea.

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