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Not all Las Veags Hotels are the same.
Before your next trip to Las Veagas, you need to check out our top five
picks for 2003.
Our #5 The Luxor
The interior of the pyramid, which was built in
1993, is an architectural wonder. The rows of hotel rooms become
smaller as they converge to a point 30 floors up.
As you enter Luxor, 3900 Las Vegas Blvd. South,
you'll pass by the talking camels. Head toward the front lobby and
up the escalator to Pharaoh's Pavilion.
Upstairs, the resort continues the Egyptian
theme with the Tomb and Museum of King Tutankhamen, a full-scale
reproduction of Howard Carter's 1922 discovery of King Tut's burial
site. An audio tour gives a description of the replicated treasures
found in the tomb.
You can learn more about the Carter's discovery
by watching the film "Mysteries of Egypt" in the
seven-story Imax Theatre. Also showing in the theater is the 3-D
"Cyberworld." While the plot is geared more to the
under-10 crowd, the 3-D effects will impress showgoers of all ages.
Luxor's Passport to Adventure at $23.95
includes entry to both movies, the museum, the Imax ride-film and a
virtual-reality roller coaster.
Luxor offers plenty of activities at night.
There's the popular, avant-garde Blue Man Group show, and, for
late-night action, the young and beautiful people head to the Ra
nightclub.
From the second-floor Pharaoh's Pavilion, head
down the escalator near the food court to the casino level. Just
past the sports book is the walkway to Mandalay Bay.
Our #4 The Venetian
LAS VEGAS -- A $1.5 billion touch of Venice on the site where the
Rat Pack once played? Gondolas bobbing in a 586,000-gallon lagoon in the middle of the
Nevada desert? Life-size replicas of Italian icons on the Las Vegas Strip?
Welcome to Venice, Vegas-style.
Two years after ground was broken, the new Venetian Resort
hotel-casino is set to make its debut this week, the latest player
in this city's mega-resort mania.
It was at this site in another era that Frank Sinatra, Sammy
Davis Jr., Dean Martin, Peter Lawford and Joey Bishop cavorted at
the legendary Sands Hotel as the Rat Pack. The Sands is gone now,
dropped in a midnight implosion Nov. 26, 1996. In its place is a
3,036-room hotel with an elegance that raises the bar of opulence in
this gambling and entertainment capital.
''We've tried to duplicate all the famous landmarks of Venice,''
Venetian owner and chairman Sheldon Adelson says during a recent
tour, pointing to replicas of landmarks such as the Doge's Palace
and the Rialto Bridge.
Noting the intricate detail in stately columns, Mr. Adelson
says he's spent ''tens of millions of dollars'' in detailed work to
set the Venetian apart from most resorts. The ornate statuary was
shaped by 250 sculptors, designers and artists working in a plant
Mr. Adelson established here.
''It had to be real,'' he says. ''It had to be the right way, or
it would not have been Venice.''
Outside, a lagoon with working gondolas sweeps around replicas of
the famous landmarks of Italy's most romantic city.
Entering the 35-story hotel there's a domed ceiling 65 feet high,
50 feet in diameter, featuring replicas of artwork found in Venice.
A gallery 150 feet long, 40 feet high and 30 feet wide features more
artwork amid giant columns of Italian marble.
A richly appointed casino features more murals and paintings.
''We want to pass along the luxury and the decadence of Venetian
palaces,'' Mr. Adelson says. ''What we have here is the romance of
Venice with the luxury of Beverly Hills and the excitement of Las
Vegas. You don't have that anywhere.''
Luxury is the key. While some Las Vegas resorts are aiming at the
family market, Venetian isn't one of them.
''This is not a family-oriented resort,'' Mr. Adelson says. ''Our
market is the affluent, high-end traveler.''
Room rates will average $167 a night, with lows ranging from
$109-$119 off-peak and $239-$289 on peak weekends.
Features in the new property should be a magnet for upscale
travelers -- both business and pleasure.
The hotel houses 15 restaurants with famous culinary names
such as Wolfgang Puck, Canaletto, Delmonico, Lutece and Postrio.
The famous Canyon Ranch Spa will operate a 65,000-square-foot,
state-of-the-art spa, offering almost 100 spa services. Guests can
stay in the special Canyon Ranch wing, with private corridors and
elevators leading directly to the spa.
The Grand Canal Shoppes will feature 78 retailers such as
Mikimoto, Movado and Chopard in an elegant streetscape setting
complete with canals and gondolas, built around a replica of
Venice's St. Mark's Square.
The 3,036 rooms are suite-sized, averaging 700 square feet, and
include sunken living rooms, bathrooms finished in Italian marble, a
fax machine and two 27-inch color televisions.
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