Circa Resort & Casino is a
casino and
hotel resort in
downtown Las Vegas,
Nevada, on the
Fremont Street Experience. The property was previously occupied by the
Las Vegas Club hotel-casino, the
Mermaids Casino, and the Glitter Gulch strip club. Circa is owned by brothers
Derek and Greg Stevens, who also own other downtown casinos. They purchased the Las Vegas Club in 2015, followed by the acquisition of Mermaids and Glitter Gulch. The three businesses were demolished in 2017, and construction on Circa began in February 2019, with an opening initially scheduled for December 2020.
When the
COVID-19 pandemic began, new safety precautions were put in place and the project faced disruptions in its supply chain, both causing an alteration in the construction schedule. As a result, construction on the first five floors was expedited for an early opening on October 28, 2020. The opening included a two-story casino, a three-story
sportsbook by
Circa Sports, five restaurants, and a six-tiered swimming pool area. The hotel portion opened on December 28, 2020, with 512 rooms. It is the tallest building in the
Fremont Street area, and the first new hotel-casino to be built there since 1980.
History
In August 2015, brothers
Derek and Greg Stevens purchased the
Las Vegas Club, located at 18
Fremont Street in downtown Las Vegas. The Stevens also owned the nearby
Golden Gate Hotel and Casino and
The D Las Vegas. They closed the Las Vegas Club in August 2015.[1] Derek Stevens initially considered renovating the Las Vegas Club, but he disliked its design and decided to demolish it entirely to build a new resort in its place.[2]
In 2016, the Stevens purchased the nearby
Mermaids Casino and the Glitter Gulch strip club.[3][4] The additional property opened new possibilities for a larger version of the Stevens' upcoming resort, and the brothers took additional time to determine specifics about the new project.[5] Mermaids and Glitter Gulch closed later in 2016, with plans to demolish them to make more room for the new resort.[3][4] That year, Derek Stevens also purchased a 2-acre site across the street from the Las Vegas Club, between the
Plaza Hotel & Casino and the
Main Street Station. The property would become the site of the new resort's eventual parking garage.[2][6] The Las Vegas Club, Mermaids, and Glitter Gulch were demolished in 2017.[1][7]
Derek Stevens had initially planned to build a resort on the site called Lucky Line, designed by
Paul Steelman. It would have been a 500-foot skyscraper with an observation deck and rooftop restaurant, similar to the nearby
Strat tower.[8] The new resort project was once referred to as "18 Fremont" because of its address,[9] although the final street address of the resort is 8 Fremont Street.[10] By May 2018, the project was planned to include a 459-foot-tall hotel, making it among the
tallest buildings in downtown Las Vegas. This raised
FAA concerns about height and airspace due to the project's proximity with the
North Las Vegas Airport.[7] The new resort, with a height of 459 feet, was approved by the
Las Vegas City Council in July 2018.[11]
On January 10, 2019, the resort's name was unveiled as Circa Resort & Casino,[12][13] during a party at the Downtown Las Vegas Events Center.[2] The name is a
homage to the history of Las Vegas,[14] including past casino builders such as
Benny Binion,
Jackie Gaughan,
Jay Sarno, and
Sam Boyd.[15] A video montage explained the resort's name, listing examples of earlier well known Las Vegas properties and their establishment dates and founders, such as, "Circa 1941, Jackie Gaughan,
El Cortez. Circa 1951, Benny Binion,
Binion's Horseshoe. Circa 1966, Jay Sarno,
Caesars Palace. Circa 1969,
Kirk Kerkorian,
International." The video further stated that the announcement of Circa's name would one day be referred to as, "Circa January 2019." Other names were considered, including Overland, which was the original name of the Las Vegas Club; and
The Mint, which was the name of a former property adjacent to the Las Vegas Club. Circa was scheduled to open in December 2020.[12][2] Derek Stevens intended for the resort to be opened prior to 2021 for tax advantages.[16][17]
Construction
Circa was designed by
Steelman Partners. The construction manager was Tré Builders, while McCarthy Building Companies Inc. was the
general contractor.[18] Construction began in February 2019.[10][19] The tight size of the property meant that only three days' worth of materials could be delivered at a time. Parts of the resort were prefabricated off-site and then transported to the construction site for integration into the resort.[19] A concrete pour took place in April 2019, with an estimated 2,100 cubic yards (1,600 m3) of concrete.[16] As of June 2019, there were nearly 600 construction workers on the project, including approximately 200 workers on the main property and approximately 40 workers on Garage Mahal. Construction progressed with a continuous schedule. The 1.25-million sq ft (116,000 m2) project began vertical construction that month.[17] The resort's
HVAC system was built to dispense air from the floor rather than the ceiling, eliminating a common problem with cigarette smoke lingering on casino floors.[20]
Beginning in October 2019, the project had approximately 1,000 construction workers. Three months later, construction reached the 23rd floor.[21] The
COVID-19 pandemic occurred during construction, having
various effects in Nevada. A Circa construction worker tested positive for
COVID-19 in April 2020.[22]Social distancing had been implemented as a safety precaution for COVID-19, and this meant that fewer workers were allowed to work on the upper floors.[23] The construction elevator, normally capable of holding 15 workers, had its capacity reduced to less than five as a pandemic safety measure.[19] The project also faced disruptions in its construction supply chain, another result of the pandemic. Rather than finish the entire resort before opening, the Stevens agreed to a new proposal from the construction team to expedite work on the first five floors, including the casino and pool. The lower floors provided wide-open spaces for social distancing and they were more easily accessible than the upper floors.[19][23]
The Circa hotel tower was
topped out on June 19, 2020.[24] The tower includes 175,000 sq ft (16,300 m2) of glass paneling.[25] The tower's north side features a giant video screen which promotes the resort. It was built by
Daktronics, and measures 228 feet tall and 52 feet wide.[26] During construction, a minor error occurred on the west side of the tower's 30th-floor exterior. Mo Pierce, one of the project engineers, installed a white-colored glass panel in the wrong spot, making it stand out from the rest of the paneling.[19][27][28] By mid-2020, the mistake had gained an online following, and Derek Stevens said the misplaced panel was nicknamed as the "MoDot" and was used as a reference point: "(We'd say) plumbing is going on three floors below the MoDot, we're doing this above the MoDot. It became a noun, it became part of our regular vocabulary."[27] The MoDot was eventually removed, a few days after the resort's opening.[29] Circa was the first new hotel-casino to be built in downtown's Fremont Street area since the D Las Vegas, which originally opened as the Sundance in 1980.[2][30][31]
Opening
In June 2020, plans were announced to open the first five floors early, on October 28, while the hotel portion would open two months later.[23][32] Derek Stevens also announced that Circa will be an adult-only property, stating that Las Vegas once held "a certain mystique as this fabulous place where only grown-ups could play. Call us old-fashioned, but we think adults need some of that mystique back in their lives."[33]
Circa hosted a VIP party for select guests on the night of October 27, 2020, followed by the public opening at 12:01 a.m. the next day. The opening included the casino, restaurants, and pool area.[34][35][36] Although the hotel's official opening took place on December 28, 2020,[37][38][39] hotel guests who booked for the opening day had the ability to check in two days early. Derek Stevens billed it as the world's earliest check-in.[40][41] A total of 165 hotel guests participated in the early opening.[42] The hotel opened initially with 512 rooms,[43][31] excluding the seven top floors; a decision about completing those will be made a year after the opening. Stevens said that waiting to finish the upper floors would allow time to determine what type of rooms each floor should have: standard rooms or suites.[44]
Circa is the first new hotel-casino to open in the Las Vegas Valley since the
Lucky Dragon in 2016.[45] The resort has 1,500 employees, helping the city amid high unemployment rates caused by the pandemic.[46] Circa is expected to help bring tourism back to the downtown area, away from the
Las Vegas Strip.[47][48][30][49] As of 2021, Circa is the only property in the downtown area to have an
AAA Four Diamond rating.[50] That year, it also won for best North American gaming property from Global Gaming Awards Las Vegas.[51]
Features
Circa is located on 2.78 acres.[31] It has 35 floors and rises 480 feet.[52][53] It is among
the tallest buildings in
Las Vegas city limits.[a] The hotel has 26 room types, ranging from 980 to 1,830 square feet.[56] Circa includes technological features, such as a
tablet computer that allows hotel guests to control lighting and temperature, or to request housekeeping. Using an interactive online map, customers can also pay to reserve certain seating at restaurants, the pool, or the
sportsbook.[57]
The resort's design includes references to past and modern Las Vegas history.[44][58] Various forms of artwork, including murals, are featured throughout Circa.[59] The resort's lobby incorporates the former
Vegas Vickie cowgirl sign that once advertised Glitter Gulch.[60][18][15]
Circa's nine-story parking garage, known as Garage Mahal, is located across the street from the resort.[2][18][32] It contains 982 parking spaces, artwork, a 22-foot chandelier, and an air-conditioned skybridge connecting it to the Circa resort.[61][62][63]
In September 2022, the resort is scheduled to open 35,000 sq ft (3,300 m2) of convention and meeting space on its third floor.[64]
Bars and lounges
Circa has six bars and lounges,[65][66] including an 8,400 sq ft (780 m2) rooftop lounge known as the Legacy Club, which honors prominent Las Vegas figures. It includes
busts of 11 prominent figures,[67][68][69] and a display of 500 gold bars.[70][57] The lounge also has views of the Las Vegas Valley and includes patio seating.[70][68]
A cocktail lounge known as Vegas Vickie's is located in the hotel lobby and contains the eponymous sign. Circa also has the longest outdoor bar on the
Fremont Street Experience, and the state's longest indoor bar, known as the Mega Bar.[34][65] It is a sister to the Longbar at the D Las Vegas, breaking its record for Nevada's longest indoor bar at 165 feet.[65][71] Overhang Bar, located on the top floor of the sportsbook, is an homage to the right-field overhang in the original
Tiger Stadium, located in Stevens' hometown of Detroit.[63][72]
Gaming
Circa includes a two-story casino,[18][73] measuring 8,002 sq ft (743.4 m2), with 1,350 slot machines and 49 table games.[74]
Circa will heavily focus on sports betting.[75] Its three-story, stadium-style sportsbook was planned as the biggest in Las Vegas and is a prime aspect of the resort,[18][76][77] unlike other newer resorts in Las Vegas that place less emphasis on sportsbooks.[75] The book is operated by
Circa Sports, and is the company's flagship location,[78] with seating for 1,000 people.[61][79] It includes a three-story, high-definition 78 megapixel television screen, built at a cost of approximately $20 million.[75][80] Up to 10 people are required to operate the screen.[81] Derek Stevens said that the sportsbook would be the largest in the world, beating out the 30,000 sq ft (2,800 m2) SuperBook at the
Westgate Las Vegas.[82][83]
Stevens' vision for the sportsbook was inspired by his initial visits to the books at Caesars Palace and the
Hilton (now the Westgate), both of which he considered impressive.[18][15] The sportsbook also includes a broadcasting studio for the
Vegas Stats & Information Network,[84][85] and Circa is expected to become the center of sports wagering in downtown Las Vegas.[86] The resort will build upon Circa Sports' reputation for allowing
sharp bettors.[87]
Stadium Swim
Circa's rooftop pool area is known as Stadium Swim, and is located above the casino.[15][88] Stadium Swim includes six pools and measures 15,756 sq ft (1,463.8 m2), with capacity for 4,000 people.[89] It includes a six-tiered pool area with a 143-foot screen[90] made of 14 megapixels,[53][18][76] as well as a DJ booth and two swim-up bars.[91] Sporting events will be primarily shown on the pool's television screen.[75] The pool is temperature-controlled, allowing it to remain open year-round. Derek Stevens expects the pool to become a top tourist destination, and he envisions the pool as becoming the greatest in the history of the world.[92] A three-story escalator,[93] the tallest in Las Vegas, transports people to Stadium Swim.[62] The pool area has become a popular location for parties.[94][95]
Restaurants
Circa has several restaurants, including some operated by people from the Stevens' home state of Michigan.[96][97][98] Those restaurants include:
8 East, an Asian restaurant serving Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Thai, and Vietnamese food.[96][97][99]
Barry's Downtown Prime, a steakhouse and seafood restaurant by chef Barry Dakake, with an atmospheric setting of 1950s and 1960s Las Vegas.[96][97][100] It is Circa's largest restaurant,[34] with seating for 350.[101] It is the only part of the resort to allow people under the age of 21.[102]
Project BBQ, an outdoor barbeque restaurant with a
food truck façade, located along the Fremont Street Experience.[96][97][103]
Saginaw's Delicatessen, serving breakfast specialties and
delicatessen options.[96][97] During certain hours, it offers
99-cent shrimp cocktails, a popular local item that had been introduced by the Golden Gate casino in the 1950s.[104]
Victory Burger & Wings Co.,[105] a burger and chicken wing restaurant overlooking the sportsbook.[96][97]
^Velotta, Richard N. (2017-06-12).
"Owner of PT's Pubs to buy Stratosphere, 3 other Nevada casinos". Las Vegas Review-Journal. Retrieved 2020-11-06. The biggest part of the transaction, literally and figuratively, is the 2,427-room Stratosphere and its 1,149-foot tower, the tallest freestanding observation facility in the United States. The site, technically, is just off the Strip within the Las Vegas city limits.
^Smith, Hubble (2008-01-07).
"Certificate of occupancy secured for Allure Las Vegas". Las Vegas Review-Journal. Retrieved 2020-11-06. At 41 stories, Allure is officially the tallest residential building in the city of Las Vegas.