Current:Home > reviewsTropicana implosion in Las Vegas: After 67 years, Rat Pack-era Strip resort falls -Elevate Profit Vision
Tropicana implosion in Las Vegas: After 67 years, Rat Pack-era Strip resort falls
View
Date:2025-04-14 07:25:43
LAS VEGAS – The Tropicana had a lengthy history, by Las Vegas standards.
The hotel-casino debuted in 1957. Nicknamed the "Tiffany of the Strip" for its grandeur, the resort made a name for itself through its entertainment offerings, with stages showcasing the long-lasting showgirl revue Folies Bergere and big-name jazz performers like Louis Armstrong.
The property stood for nearly 70 years on the Strip.
Bringing it down took less than 30 seconds.
Around 2:30 a.m. Pacific on Wednesday, more than 2,000 pounds of explosives took down the Tropicana’s Paradise Tower and Club Tower in roughly 22 seconds. It was Las Vegas' first implosion in nearly a decade, opening up space on the Strip for a new Major League Baseball stadium for the Athletics, formerly of Oakland, California.
"Let’s not think of it as an ending, but as the beginning of something even greater,” Arik Knowles, general manager and vice president of hospitality at the Tropicana, told spectators Wednesday morning.
'It’s a work of art'
The send-off included a 555-drone and fireworks display timed to tunes from Vegas legends like Frank Sinatra and Elvis Presley, with drones creating images of the iconic Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas sign and the Athletics logo.
There were no public viewing areas for the implosion due to safety restrictions, and an invite-only event had an estimated 500 spectators in attendance. That didn’t stop people from flocking to Las Vegas in hopes of catching a glimpse of the show.
Room rates for surrounding hotels jumped the night of the implosion. Mandalay Bay, which hosted an implosion watch party at a rooftop venue, had room rates starting at $699 Tuesday night, compared with less than $80 for a stay on Thursday. Other hotels close to the implosion site like the Excalibur, Luxor and Oyo were fully booked, according to their websites.
Steve Crupi, a former TV news reporter known as the “implosion guy” after covering every major Las Vegas implosion, told USA TODAY he's used to seeing large crowds gather to watch casinos fall.
“There's something magical about implosions,” he said. “A structure that big being brought down in as little as 5 seconds? It just seems impossible. And yet they do with such precision and such artistry, that it really is just more than an act of demolition. It’s a work of art.”
Tropicana performers share memories:The Tropicana was once 'the Tiffany of the Strip.' For former showgirls, it was home.
This isn’t Las Vegas’ first foray into using explosions to boost tourism. In the 1950s, the city’s chamber of commerce leaned into atomic tourism, going so far as to issue a calendar for tourists with a bomb detonation schedule and viewing sites, according to PBS.
“It’s just part of that human fascination for things going boom,” said David Schwartz, an affiliate history professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
By the time the Las Vegas Strip had its first resort implosion, the city was well-versed in turning explosions into spectacles.
For the Dune’s 1993 implosion, Treasure Island’s pirate ship appeared to fire its cannons toward the 38-year-old property. Cannons blasted, hundreds of pounds of explosives were set off, and the resort crumbled.
More hotel-casino implosions followed, with the likes of the Stardust, Aladdin and the Desert Inn falling in clouds of dust. The Riviera was the last Strip resort to implode before the Tropicana, with a 2016 demolition.
“There’s been a dry spell,” said Mark Loizeaux, president of Controlled Demolition, Inc. The Phoenix, Maryland-based company has overseen every major Las Vegas property implosion going back to the Dunes.
Like the other resorts that fell before it, the Tropicana’s fall was meticulously planned.
The towers were gutted in advance, Loizeaux said, and walls were torn down to limit “dust creators." The property’s implosion was planned for early on a weekday for less wind and traffic.
The goal, Loizeaux said, is to “get these structures down quickly, safely, and let things return to normal” for the community and its casinos.
Let's play ball
Las Vegas is known for many things. Being stagnant is not one of them.
The city has a habit of reinventing itself, going from its mobbed-up Rat Pack era to one focused on building out megaresorts.
Now, the city has a shiny new focus: sports.
The Tropicana’s fall is meant to pave room for the city’s fourth major league sports team, with Bally’s Corporation (a gambling company) and the Athletics planning to open a new resort and ballpark where the Tropicana once stood.
Nine acres will go toward a $1.5 billion, 33,000-seat indoor stadium. The rest will be set aside for a new casino resort.
Details for the attached resort are still being worked out, according to Bally’s chairman Soohyung Kim. There’s no opening date for the resort, but the ballpark is planned to open for the 2028 MLB season.
Kim said the Tropicana was an “amazing” casino with a rich history tied to classic Las Vegas icons like the Rat Pack and showgirls. But Vegas, he said, is not a sentimental town.
“It understands that in order to remain the tourism capital of America ... it needs to keep building and growing,” he said. “We understand that what comes out of that, including a baseball stadium, needs to contribute to the health of the entire city. And I think we’re going to do a great job, and I think it's going to be an amazing asset for the city.”
(This story was updated to change or add a photo or video.)
veryGood! (982)
Related
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Sydney Sweeney and Glen Powell Reveal What It Was Really Like Filming Steamy Shower Scene
- From ChatGPT to the Cricket World Cup, the top 25 most viewed Wikipedia articles of 2023
- 'Home Alone' star Ken Hudson Campbell has successful surgery for cancer after crowdfunding
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- Why Anne Hathaway Says It’s “Lucky” Her Barbie Movie Didn’t Get Made
- Canadian police charge man accused of selling deadly substance with 14 new murder charges
- UAW accuses Honda, Hyundai and VW of union-busting
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- The 'ultimate killing machine': Skull of massive prehistoric sea predator discovered in UK
Ranking
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Benched Texas high school basketball player arrested for assaulting coach, authorities say
- Broadway audiences are getting a little bit younger and more diverse
- Benched Texas high school basketball player arrested for assaulting coach, authorities say
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Why White Lotus Season 3 Is Already Making Jaws Drop
- Most stressful jobs 2023: Judges, nurses and video editors all rank in top 10
- Packed hospitals, treacherous roads, harried parents: Newborns in Gaza face steeper odds of survival
Recommendation
How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
Court overturns conviction of former Pakistani premier Nawaz Sharif ahead of parliamentary election
FDNY reports no victims in Bronx partial building collapse
Suicide bomber attacks police station in northwest Pakistan, killing 3 officers and wounding 16
Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
Big Bang Theory's Kate Micucci Shares Lung Cancer Diagnosis
ManningCast features two 'Monday Night Football' games at once: What went right and wrong
Scientists say AI is emerging as potential tool for athletes using banned drugs