Hilton is rebranding the former Ritz-Carlton Lake Las Vegas that was foreclosed and closed down in May 2010. The hotel reopened in February 2011 as Ravella Lake Las Vegas managed by Dolce Hotels & Resorts. The hotel is now undergoing another brand change and will be Hilton Lake Las Vegas Resort & Spa in June 2013.

The website is not currently accepting reservations.

What to do around here

Enjoy the fantastic location of the Hilton Lake Las Vegas Resort & Spa, only 15 miles from McCarran Airport and 17 miles from the Las Vegas Strip. The tranquility of the nation’s largest man-made lake and its surrounding 3,400 acres, offers a retreat from the hurried pace of downtown Las Vegas. Explore the picturesque Village at Lake Las Vegas, adjacent to the hotel, which features Casino Monte Lago, championship golf, a marina and a wealth of upscale shops and international restaurants. The Village also hosts a number of events each year, from boat races and music on the lake to winter ice-skating. Take the complimentary shuttle from the hotel to the bright lights of the Strip to experience world-famous shows, impressive casinos, thrilling activities and vibrant nightlife.

Hilton Lake Las Vegas

Lake Las Vegas is east of Henderson, Nevada, about 17 miles from the Las Vegas Strip. In 2009 the two lakefront hotels were Loews and Ritz-Carlton. In March 2012 the Loews Resort rebranded to Westin.

The real estate downturn severely impacted Lake Las Vegas.

Personally I am a fan of the Lake Las Vegas location. A Hilton resort will be a nice addition.

Lake Las Vegas 019

Hilton Lake Las Vegas (This is a 2009 photo when the hotel was Ritz-Carlton Lake Las Vegas.)

I have written several posts about the two Lake Las Vegas hotels over the past few years with numerous hotel photos.

Related Posts:

Ravella at Lake Las Vegas Summer Sale for Cheap Luxury (May 17, 2011)

Ritz-Carlton Lake Las Vegas (8-21-2009)

The Westin Lake Las Vegas Resort & Spa (3-29-2012)

Loews Lake Las Vegas Resort and Instant You First Gold Elite Offer (8-21-2009)

Sometimes paying a bonus points rate is a good strategy for earning cheap Priority Club points. Bonus points package rates come in various sizes from 1,000 points to 5,000 points at many IHG properties. Limited time 10,000 bonus points rates are offered at a few hotels. At times these rates allow members to buy 10,000 points for under $50.

The advantage of paying a points package rate is bonus points qualify for elite status and 60,000 Priority Club points earned in a year confers Platinum elite for the next calendar year with 50% elite bonus points on all hotel stays as a Platinum elite.

Montelucia Resort & Spa, InterContinental Alliance Resort 10,000 bonus points rate for 2-night stays through January 31, 2013.

This package rate caught my attention.

Briefly.

Any deal that earns 10,000 points for $70 or less on a paid room rate is a cheap way to earn Priority Club points.

Montelucia Resort Rate Analysis on 2-night stay

Friday Jan 25-Sunday Jan 27, 2013

  • $714.22 Montelucia 10K PCR rate at $295 King Bedroom Resort View
  • $657.76 Advance Purchase, nonrefundable at $270/night.
  • $596.80 AAA rate at $243/night.

$117.42 additional cost over the AAA rate to book the 10,000 bonus points rate is a poor value rate.

The rates for this InterContinental Alliance Resort is not a cost effective strategy for Priority Club Rewards points.

Venetian Las Vegas and 4,000 Bonus Points for 2-night stays through Jan 6, 2013

The Venetian and The Palazzo are two InterContinental Alliance Resorts in Las Vegas. The Venetian has a 4,000 bonus points rate for 2-night stays through January 6, 2013.

December 4-6, 2012

  • AAA = $179/night.
  • Best Available = $179/night.
  • 4,000 bonus points = $179 per night. (Rate drops to $149 some dates in December).

For this hotel the 4,000 bonus points rate is no higher than any other available rate. This is a good rate deal for this specific hotel.

Update 8:30am Nov 30: Within an hour of posting this article I noticed an email from The Venetian/The Palazzo Grazie loyalty program showing rates at $129 for much of December 2012 for dates when the IHG website shows $149 per night. Is this a Best Rate Guarantee opportunity for a free night?

Must book this special offer rate by Dec 6.

 

Ric Garrido, writer and owner of Loyalty Traveler, shares news and views on hotels, hotel loyalty programs and vacation destinations for frequent guests. You can follow Loyalty Traveler on Twitter and Facebook and RSS feed.

In March 2012 the Loews Lake Las Vegas rebranded as the Westin Lake Las Vegas.  Lake Las Vegas is outside the town of Henderson about 20 miles east of the Las Vegas Strip.

There is also Ravella at Lake Las Vegas, a Dolce Hotel, formerly the Ritz-Carlton Lake Las Vegas and a small shopping and entertainment center with a casino at that part of the lake, a little over one mile from the Westin Resort.  Read More…

Discounted suites for The Palazzo and The Venetian in Las Vegas are the offers on Discover America Daily Getaways at 12 noon ET (New York time), Monday May 9. There are four offers with 14 items in each offer. These four offers are actually one Siena suite at the Palazzo and one Piazza Suite at the Venetian. Each hotel offers 14 items for weekday bookings and 14 items for weekend bookings of suites.

These rates are likely a savings of $300 to $600 for the two night suite package.

The Palazzo Siena Suite, 1,280 square feet with semi-formal dining area. Siena Suite description.

The Venetian Piazza View Suite, 1,400 square feet with semi-formal dining area. Piazza Suite description.

Related Posts: Loyalty traveler reviews –

The Palazzo Las Vegas Part 1 – Bella Room Suite (April 27, 2011)

The Palazzo Las Vegas Part 2 – Pools (April 28, 2011)

The Palazzo Resort Las Vegas

 

 

The Palazzo and The Venetian in Las Vegas became InterContinental Alliance Resorts on April 1, 2011. These two adjacent Las Vegas Strip resorts are currently the only two hotels in the newly created branding alliance within the InterContinental Hotels Group.

The Palazzo Resort Las Vegas, an InterContinental Alliance Resort

I booked a room for Friday night, April 22, 2011 at The Palazzo using a Priority Club Points & Cash reward night at 30,000 points + $60 cash. The room rates for that date were $199 for a King Luxury Suite or $229 for a Bella Suite with two Queen beds. Priority Club let me book either room type with an award. The paid rates were $30 more for a View room in these two hotel categories.

My sister pointed out that most Las Vegas strip hotels charge more for two beds than for one King bed. I had never noticed this before since I am 99% a King.

This is part one of a two part post on The Palazzo Las Vegas Resort.

  • Part One: The Palazzo Luxury and Bella Suites
  • Part Two: The Palazzo Resort Recreation and Entertainment

 

Hallway from Palazzo Casino to Palazzo Shops

 

The Palazzo Resort Basic Room Type – Luxury or Bella Suite

Check-in at The Palazzo:

Actual check-in time was listed as 3:00pm on my reservation. I arrived at the hotel around 2:00pm.

The parking garage has one set of elevators that take you directly to the lobby area with hotel registration desks. Another set of elevators from the garage take you close to the hotel room floor entrance and its sets of room floor elevators. The hotel rooms are located on the opposite side of the casino from the Palazzo front entrance and registration desks.

The Palazzo Las Vegas lobby

There is a dedicated check-in desk for Priority Club Elite members.

The Palazzo Priority Club elite member desk

My check-in agent was charmingly friendly and seemed genuine in her conversational interest while setting up the hotel stay. She welcomed me as a Priority Club Platinum elite and said I was receiving an upgrade to a view room on the 32nd floor. There are three sets of room elevators for floors up to 23, 23-36 and 37-50.

Late check-out at 1 pm rather than the normal time of 11am was offered as a complimentary benefit.

Royal Ambassadors have their own separate registration lounge room at The Palazzo.

The Palazzo Royal Ambassador hotel registration lounge

I received a Bella View suite on Floor 32 with my Priority Club Points & Cash room. The room rate for this last minute reward night was $290 for room with tax. My 30,000 Priority Club points were worth $230 or $7.67 per 1,000 points. That is why buying points at $6 per 1,000 is a good idea when you get the chance with Points & Cash rewards.

$7.67 per 1,000 points is actually a low redemption value for my Priority Club reward stays where I generally spend points for $10+ per 1,000 points. The primary reason I went with points was to avoid spending $230 more for the hotel night. I burned points to save the cash for other hotel stays I need to make in May 2011 that will earn back far more than 30,000 Priority Club points.

P for Palazzo in marble

Check-in Amenities:

There is a mandatory Palazzo Resort fee of $17.00 + 12% tax = $19.04 per day. This fee includes free wi-fi and access to Canyon Ranch Spa fitness rooms. There is even a rock-climbing wall in the spa. This is also a location where breakfast can be purchased at a café far less crowded than the pool area or casino locations.

There was a set of coupons provided at check-in which appeared to be geared for Priority Club members. My sister who booked a rate not using Priority Club had different coupons for her stay.

The Palazzo discount coupons provided with my Priority Club reward night stay had the following offers:

  • Canyon Ranch Spa $35 off any 50 minute or longer Massage or Facial.
  • Morels French Steakhouse & Bistro – 20% off breakfast or brunch.
  • Zine Noodles DimSum – Asian cuisine – $30 off $60 purchase.
  • LAVO Nightclub – complimentary line pass and admission.
  • Piano Bar two for one drinks.

 

The Palazzo Las Vegas lobby ceiling

 

Prestige at The Palazzo

Prestige at The Palazzo is a nightly paid upgrade for an additional $100 that includes:

  • Private champagne check-in starting at noon (normal check-in time is 3pm).
  • Deluxe continental breakfast from 7am – 10am.
  • Coffee and tea on 23rd floor from 10am – 4pm.
  • Hot and cold hors d’oeuvres from 5pm – 7pm.
  • Complimentary cocktail reception from 5pm – 8pm in the 23rd floor lounge.
  • Desserts from 7pm – 9pm.
  • Plasma TV screens throughout the 23rd floor lounge.
  • Complimentary wi-fi on 23rd floor.
  • DVD library for suite.
  • Personal concierge service 7am – 9pm.

Basically Prestige is an extra $93 after tax over the otherwise mandatory resort fee of $17 + tax. For two people this could be a decent value for the additional food and drinks.

Complimentary continental breakfast in the Floor 23 lounge is perhaps a $25 per day value. The Grand Lux in the Palazzo casino has many more food selections with a buffet breakfast at $15.95 per person. This is a relatively good deal at Grand Lux dining room for a Las Vegas Strip resort breakfast.

Drinks are $6 beer and $12 cocktails in most places around the Palazzo Resort, so 3 hours of free drinks could be a significant value depending on your intake. Evening appetizers and dessert are probably another $25 to $30 value.

Prestige at the Palazzo for $100 + $12 tax = $112 per day is a reasonable price for 23rd floor lounge access if you are staying as a couple and will be hanging around the hotel for the free food and drinks. Most of the other amenities like wi-fi and fitness room access are provided with the regular daily resort fee.

The View

The room view overlooked the pools, but from the 32nd floor the pools are rather far away.

The Palazzo Las Vegas - pool view from Floor 32

 

Straight ahead window view was Treasure Island and that hotel had an 8:30 pm pirate ship battle and performance. Again, this was far away for seeing the people performing in the show so our visual attention focused on the overall light effect, fireballs and sinking ship. Hundreds of people were gathered on the sidewalks watching the show outside Treasure Island.

The Palazzo Las Vegas view of Treasure Island

The lights at night stretching across the valley are pretty to watch.

The Palazzo Las Vegas view

The Room:

The entry-rate standard room category at The Palazzo is either a Luxury Suite (King bed) or Bella Suite (two Queen Beds). My family had one of each room type for this stay and both rooms were identical with the exception of the beds. These are large rooms at 720 square feet. Most commonly a luxury class hotel room is about 500 to 600 sq. ft. at the entry level room category.

The Palazzo Las Vegas Bella Suite

 

The Bella Suite has two Queen beds. Good quality pillows and linens make these comfortable beds.

Each bed has a seat at the foot of the bed. There was seating for at least ten people in the room.

The Palazzo Las Vegas bed seat.

 

The bed section of the suite has a wall-mounted 42-inch TV.

The Sitting Room

The couch is extra large and contains a pull-out bed.

The Palazzo Las Vegas large couch and desk

The Palazzo Las Vegas Bella Suite TV

The TV in the sitting room seemed slightly smaller, perhaps 37-inch. This piece of furniture also had stocked electronic mini-bar and room safe.  A small round table with three chairs in front of the window provided a place to eat or sit. Two stairs between beds and sitting room could be an issue for some guests.  

The Palazzo Las Vegas Bella Suite curtains

 

The Bathroom

The bathroom is a large space at 130 square feet with separate shower and bathtub, dual sinks, a separate toilet room and stand alone vanity table.

The Palazzo Las Vegas bathroom vanity table in Bella Suite

Separate shower and tub.

Dual sinks and just outside this picture on the right is a wall mounted TV.

Separate toilet room.

My overall impression is the size of the room at The Palazzo makes this hotel a great choice if you want room to move about in your room at a price that is likely cheaper than upgrading to a room this size at most of the other Las Vegas Strip hotels.

Part Two at The Palazzo Las Vegas has photos of  the seven or so pools and Canyon Ranch Spa.

This is a good YouTube video posted by SuperCabbie1 showing the standard Palazzo luxury suite with a King bed. There is an extra chair that is not present in Bella Suites with two Queen Beds. The room location in the video is the non-view room that looks southeast to the Venetian and lots of low roof tops over the casino and spa and parking garages behind the Las Vegas Strip resorts.

Caesars Entertainment has 50% offers for Caesars Palace Las Vegas, Harrahs Las Vegas and Lake Tahoe Spa Getaway discounted travel packages on sale today Thursday April 14, 2011 at DiscoverAmerica.com. The sale begins at 12 noon ET (New York time). There are a limited number of items for sale.

DiscoverAmerica.com Daily Getaways link.

$264 Harrah’s Las Vegas. ($237.60 with American Express payment)

  • 2 nights in Mini-Suite room and
  • roundtrip Airport Transportation, and
  • bottle of champagne in room.
  • 15 packages available.
  • Maximum one package per person.

$275 Harrah’s Las Vegas ($247.50 with American Express payment).

  • 3 nights in Deluxe room,
  • 2 show tickets and
  • $100 dining credit.
  • 20 items for sale.
  • Maximum one package per person.
  • Travel must be completed by May 12, 2012.
  • Travel must be booked at least 30 days in advance. 

$275 Lake Tahoe Spa Getaway  at Harrah’s or Harvey’s ($247.50 with American Express payment).

  • 2 nights accommodation in luxury room plus spa treatment at Harrah’s Lake Tahoe Resort or Harvey’s Lake Tahoe.
  • Two spa treatments with either 50-minute Swedish Therapeutic Massage or a Classic European Facial.
  • Sunday through Thursday nights only. No weekend stays allowed.
  • Travel package must be redeemed by March 29, 2012.
  • 5 items for sale.
  • Maximum one package per person.  

$481 Caesars Palace Las Vegas. ($432.90 with American Express payment).

  • 2 nights accommodation (no room type specified).
  • 2 all-day Buffet of Buffets passes.
  • 2 fitness center day passes.
  • Roundtrip airport transportation by limo.
  • 25 items for sale.
  • Maximum one package per person.
  • Travel must be completed by May 12, 2012.
  • Travel must be booked at least 30 days in advance.

$1,110 Caesars Palace VIP Stay ($999 with American Express payment).

  • 3 nights in a suite.
  • $250 dining credit.
  • 2 show tickets of your choice at any of 8 Caesars Entertainment properties.
  • 2 Roman Rituals day passes for QUA Baths & Spa.
  • Roundtrip limousine transportation from Las Vegas Airport.
  • Bottle of champagne in room.
  • Travel must be completed by May 12, 2012.
  • Travel must be booked at least 30 days in advance.
  • 20 items for sale.
  • Maximum one package per person.

These hotel discount sales are high value discounts and some items sell out quickly. You need to be ready to make a purchase at the start of the sale if you really desire one of these items.

About DiscoverAmerica.com

DiscoverAmerica.com is the official travel and tourism website of the United States. The Daily Getaways are sponsored by American Express and prices are discounted by 10% when using American Express as payment. DiscoverAmerica.com has 25 days of discounted travel opportunities with a focus on hotels and car rentals through its “Daily Getaways” on its website.

Hyatt Gold Passport points Daily Getaway offer, Friday, April 15 – 12 noon ET

Hyatt Gold Passport points are available at a significant discount through DiscoverAmerica.com (about $10/1,000 points) compared to the purchase price through Hyatt Gold Passport ($24/1,000 points).

Currently the first three weeks of DiscoverAmerica.com DailyGetaways offers have posted.

Week 1: April 11-15, 2011

 

Week 2: April 18-22, 2011

 

Week 3: April 25-29, 2011

Mandarin Oriental is a small luxury hotel chain with fewer than 30 branded hotels worldwide.  The hotel brand is planning to grow by 50% over the next few years with hotel projects currently in development. There are six Mandarin Oriental hotels in the U.S. and one in Bermuda and one in Riviera Maya Mexico.

Link: Global Mandarin Oriental hotel locations.

Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas is one of three hotels in the MGM/Dubai World $9 billion dollar CityCenter project on the Las Vegas Strip between the Bellagio and Monte Carlo casino resorts. Aria Resort & Casino is the focal point of CityCenter and the only hotel of the three with a casino. Vdara is a mixed-use hotel and residential building located adjacent to the Cosmopolitan, the newest Las Vegas casino resort opened December 15, 2010, although a separate property from the CityCenter complex.

Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas opened one year ago in December 2009 with the CityCenter Las Vegas grand opening. Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas at CityCenter is a 539-ft building. The building is 47 stories, with the hotel in the lower 23 floors containing 392 guest rooms and suites.

The 23rd floor is the top Sky Lobby hotel floor at the Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas. 

The lobby reception desk on the 23rd floor is also the concierge desk on the right end. The lobby is a bright space in day with large windows letting in the Vegas sunny sky and a dimly lit space at night with great views north along the Las Vegas Strip and City Center building lights and sights.

Sky Lobby 23rd floor - photo courtesy of Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas

The reception desk, lobby seating, Mandarin Bar and Twist restaurant are located at the Sky Lobby. The 3rd floor holds the hotel conference center wing and the all-day restaurant MOzen. 

The hotel ground floor lobby entrance has elevators giving access only to the 3rd floor and 23rd floor Sky Lobby.

MOzen Bistro - photo courtesy of Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas

Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas elevators have a cushioned bench.

Eating and Drinking at the Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas

Tea Lounge: The lobby lounge area seating offers a high tea service daily in the afternoon from 2:30 to 5 pm. 

MOzen is seemingly Mandarin Oriental zen, although I like the American twist for mo’ zen in a BustaRhymes  gimme some mo’ word way to have ‘more zen’ all-day dining restaurant. Prices are high with oatmeal breakfast in double digits and breakfast plate around $30.

Mandarin Bar is currently only open evenings with 5pm to 1am hours or 2am Friday and Saturday. The view from Mandarin Bar is one of the best publicly accessible views in Las Vegas. One drink is worth the cost of admission if a good window seat is available. Think $20 to $30 for each set of drinks for a couple.

Mandarin Bar - photo courtesy of Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas

I lounged for about an hour in a chair by the picture windows looking out to Planet Hollywood and Paris Las Vegas. Great bar snack crunchies of three varieties including wasabi nuts came with the beer. $12 poorer upon departure. Cool feature for CityCenter hotels is charges for Aria and Vdara bar and dining can be direct billed to Mandarin Oriental hotel bill and same for guests of those hotels.

Mandarin Bar - The Edge - photo courtesy of Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas

Twist is evening fine dining on the 23rd floor of Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas. The cuisine is fusion, creative, and around $50 per entrée.

Twist by Pierre Gagnaire - photo courtesy of Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas

Large Windows on 23rd floor define Mandarin Bar and top of Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas Hotel. Higher floors are Mandarin Oriental residences.

Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas - photo courtesy of Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas

Sky Lobby and Mandarin Bar are left window bank and Twist is right window bank on 23rd floor.

Arrival at Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas

Mandarin Oriental is a luxury hotel with prices in the luxury range for everything except the room rates. Room rates under $200 per night, particularly with a flight inclusive travel package through sites like Expedia and Orbitz make Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas one of the lowest priced Mandarin Oriental hotels in the world.

Parking is valet only and $30 for overnight at the Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas. The hotel entrance is on Las Vegas Boulevard just past the City Center entrance. You can save $30 parking fee if you take the CityCenter entrance and self-park at Aria Casino and walk to the Mandarin Oriental hotel.

Aria Resort & Casino has free self-parking and takes a five minute walk to Mandarin Oriental from the Aria self-park garage casino entrance using the outdoor sidewalk in the CityCenter complex.

By the large colorful typewriter eraser art sculpture is a flight of stairs from the sidewalk to the entry level of Mandarin Oriental Hotel. Alternative to the stairs is a sidewalk escalator by the pedestrian overpass and at the bottom of the escalators is the world’s slowest 3-ft. elevator ride from the CityCenter sidewalk down to the Mandarin Oriental driveway.

CityCenter sidewalks in front of Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas

CityCenter pedestrian overpass and road to Aria self-park or Aria hotel entrance.

The Aria garage is at the left side of the Aria Hotel in the background. The Mandarin Oriental is to the left of the pedestrian overpass.

Mandarin Oriental and CityCenter - photo courtesy of Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas

The Lower Lobby

Lower Lobby - photo courtesy of Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas

Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas has a small ground level lobby with seating area, staff desk and elevators to the 23rd floor main reception desk in the Sky Lobby.

Sky Lobby – 23rd floor Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas

The hotel guest is greeted with this image when the elevator opens to the Sky Lobby.

Sky Lobby Elevator Opens to View - photo courtesy of Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas

Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas  CityScape Room

Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas requires two sets of elevators to go from the entrance to guest rooms. A separate set of elevators takes guests from Floor 23 Sky Lobby level down to lower floor guest rooms within the hotel. Key card access is required for hotel elevators to guest rooms.

Hotel guest room floors are 4 through 22. There is no floor 13. Spa, fitness rooms and pools are accessed on Floor 8.

I stayed in room 1124 on the 11th floor booked in a King CityScape room basic room on a higher floor. 

Link to Mandarin Oriental hotel room and suite categories.

CityScape Room - photo courtesy of Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas

Here are my photos of this room with a different orientation in the hotel. 

Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas PR image for CityScape room differs from my image in that the sliding doors on the bathroom wall panel reveals the robed woman and conceals the glass bath wall from the bedroom when opened.

The TV shows the electronic master controls available for room lighting and entertainment using the TV remote. These are same electronic controls found in Aria Resort with wall switches, TV master remote and a nightstand remote pad.

The nightstand remote pad was not working properly in my Mandarin Oriental room. Actually, the remote may have worked, but the screen was too dim to read icon options. I reported the dim nightstand screen twice and I was told to contact them again if I couldn’t figure out how to make the screen brighter.

Hey, I had already pushed every button on the gadget to no effect. I used the TV remote for my stay. The remote system ran a little more smoothly than at Aria room.

Weirdest thing about the hotel is my hotel room in this building had the distinction of providing the worst access I’ve ever had in the USA to Verizon Wireless. Mandarin Bar was much better than my room.

Internet access at Mandarin Oriental is $18 per day.  

In contrast to the high tech room electronics was the old fashioned tub with bath salts for a relaxing soak.

A small TV and vanity mirror are on left side of counter. Aromatic sandalwood soaps are provided. I like the smell. My wife, the soap purist, thinks the Aromatherapy Associates soap makes her skin too dry.

Shower marble and tile

My pictures do not give the room justice. Furnishings were all high quality. The bed was quite comfortable for me and my preferences. Funny thing is I commented on the Aria hotel bed being too soft for me in my Loyalty Traveler review and a highly detailed review I read of the Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas complained the bed was too hard.

To each his/her own.

Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas 10-minute video walkthrough

HeWhoTravels (Ether on FlyerTalk) has a FlyerTalk post describing the Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas in far more detail than I will here. He also posted an excellent January 2010 edited 10-minute YouTube video with musical soundtrack. The video opens with views of CityCenter from the pedestrian bridge and a walk-through of the Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas with detailed views of a Premier Room. All the features of the premier room are the same as the CityScape room I stayed except for my lower category room did not have a sink by the toilet and the Premier room video shows an extra chair with footstool and small table.

My initial thought was being thankful I had stayed in Aria Resort the week before this stay since I probably would have been less favorable to Aria if I had stayed in the Mandarin Oriental hotel room first. I always prefer to finish my stay with the top of the line hotel when hotel hopping in a city.

Mandarin Oriental 8th Floor Lap Pools and Spa Tubs

Every staff member at the hotel told me the pools were closed for the winter, except for the guy who actually works at the fitness center in front of the pool doors. He said pool hours were 9am to 5pm.

Pool deck - photo courtesy of Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas

The pool area was lovely in the 65 degree weather of December. Odd everyone kept saying it was closed.

Spots on the pool deck showed cement bubbling and cracking from the intense desert sun and those 14 hour days of summer heat. 

View of south lap pool from room 1124

View from Mandarin Oriental room 1124 of hotel’s north lap pool and Aria Resort & Casino in background.

North pool view across CityCenter. Hot tub is located at far end of this pool near patio windows.

Light and Dark

Light plays an important role in the Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas experience.

Subtle hall lighting creates light space design in Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas.

Hallway overhead lighting gives multiple color effects.

Hallway wall mounted light fixture at Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas.

Elevators to hall in Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas.

 

Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas Building

The building itself is a beautiful structure designed by Kohn Pedersen Fox. Their KPF.com architectural firm website has several nice photos of the Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas hotel property.

The windows and metal frame reflect a variety of colors as the day evolves.

Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas in morning light.

Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas mid-day.

Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas afternoon sunlight.

Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas in sunset light.

Dusk - photo courtesy of Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas

view of Las Vegas Strip looking north - photo courtesy of Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas

CityCenter Night - photo courtesy of Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas

Mandarin Oriental hotels are outside my normal realm of loyalty travel. The opportunity to stay at the AAA 5-diamond Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas hotel came at an incredible bargain of $12 for one night in a CityScape King room for an Expedia.ca Air + Hotel travel package with airfare included on US Airways from San Francisco to Las Vegas.  Here is my Loyalty Traveler November 20, 2010 post on this special 48 hour Expedia Canada opportunity for incredible Las Vegas hotel deals that put me in CityCenter Las Vegas for three nights at the Aria Resort and Mandarin Oriental in December 2010 on two separate trips from California for under $100 all-in, including airfare.

Related Posts:

Betting on Expedia.ca for a Vegas Suite Deal (Nov 20, 2010) [This post tells how I bought my flight to Las Vegas and an upgraded room at the Mandarin Oriental for $12.]

CityCenter Las Vegas – Art, Architecture and Space (Dec 16, 2010)

Hotel Detail – Aria Resort and Casino Las Vegas in HD (Dec 11, 2010)

Aria Resort Las Vegas – Pools, Spa and Dining (Dec 12, 2010)

Aria Resort Corner Suite and SkySuites (Dec 18, 2010) 

Aria Resort Las Vegas SkyVilla 19 (Dec 19, 2010)

Vdara Hotel, CityCenter Las Vegas (Dec 19, 2010)

Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas (Dec 23, 2010)

The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas (Dec 21, 2010) (The Cosmopolitan is next to Vdara Hotel, but not part of CityCenter complex. The Cosmopolitan is a Marriott Autograph Collection Hotel.)

The Cosmopolitan Las Vegas is part of the Marriott Autograph Collection of independently branded hotels. Marriott won the musical chairs game in branding the Cosmopolitan for its Marriott Rewards members.

The Cosmopolitan Las Vegas could have been a Grand Hyatt. That was the plan reported in the Las Vegas Sun April 6, 2005 when the Cosmopolitan Resort and Casino was scheduled for an early 2008 opening. Hyatt pulled out of the project.

Then the Cosmopolitan was reported to become the first representative of Hilton’s new Denizen hotel brand. Months after Deutsche Bank foreclosed on the Cosmopolitan project in 2008, the news broke in March 2009 that Hilton would rebrand the hotel-casino project.

Denizen Hotels never got off the ground due to legal troubles brought from an April 2009 corporate espionage lawsuit by Starwood Hotels claiming Mr. Ross Klein, former president of Starwood’s luxury brands group  took proprietary Starwood Hotel plans to Hilton Hotels Corporation when he became head of Hilton’s luxury and lifestyle brands and launched the Denizen brand project in amazingly short time.  USA Today story of Denizen. Lawsuit puts Denizen brand on hold - Hotel World Network (April 17, 2009). Mr. Klein was suspended from his position and the Denizen hotel brand was shelved by Hilton.

Finally in August 2010 Marriott Hotels penned an agreement with the Cosmopolitan to brand the hotel in the Autograph Collection of independent properties.

Identity – The Cosmopolitan loyalty program

No wonder the Cosmopolitan came up with the name “Identity” for its gaming rewards program. The hotel also participates in Marriott Rewards, so there is confusion with two hotel loyalty programs competing for guests.

Marriott Rewards members earn 10 points per dollar at the Cosmopolitan just like other full service Marriott Rewards hotels. The Cosmopolitan is a Marriott Rewards category 7 hotel reward at 35,000 points for a free night. FlyerTalk members report there is a Marriott Rewards representative at the hotel working with the Cosmopolitan to integrate loyalty benefits for its Marriott Rewards members.

Identity may be the preferable rewards program for guests more interested in the Cosmopolitan property than Marriott Hotels in general. Identity members receive 10 points per $1 for hotel room rate and a free night after 8 nights at the Cosmopolitan. Assume $200 per night average room rate and you earn a free night after just $1,600 in hotel spend. Use your free night on a weekend for best value.

Marriott Rewards requires $3,500 in base spend to earn a free night, although elite members and promotion bonuses may reduce that hotel spend amount significantly.

The big advantage of Identity is for gamblers.

Earning Identity Points

Identity Points reside in a member’s personal account and are based on the amount of dollars either spent or wagered.

Identity Points can be earned by members as follows:

· 10 points for every $1 spent on room or suite accommodations

· 10 points for every $4 of other resort spending (e.g., restaurants, spa, selected retail)

· 10 points for every $15 wagered on reel/video reel slot

· 10 points for every $50 wagered on video poker

· 10 points for every $100 wagered on table games (approximate – varies by game type)

· Identity members who book their hotel stay through a third-party partner or online travel agency will receive a flat amount of 1,000 points per night of accommodations, in addition to points earned on their other expenditures.

Identity points may be used for room upgrades. 

FlyerTalk member Cova provides a detailed description of the Identity loyalty program and membership tier benefits with qualifications.

 

The Rooms at the Cosmopolitan

The vibrant blue of the couch, contemporary art and open space  bathrooms are modern decor for guests. The type of guest being marketed by the Cosmopolitan is a little difficult to ascertain from this 60-second TV spot.

The Cosmopolitan appears to be a pet-friendly hotel!

Cosmopolitan Las Vegas One Bedroom Terrace Suite (photo courtesy of The Cosmopolitan Las Vegas)

The club scene of the Cosmopolitan with the Bond Bar located right on Las Vegas Boulevard and the upstairs Marquee nightclub extending right out to the adults pool area with eight elevated clear glass hot tubs is the kind of place you lounge with a martini, but not in solitary comfort. The Cosmopolitan  is designed for partying, playing, dancing, dining and viewing Las Vegas from your room terrace. The Cosmopolitan is designed for people to hang out.

There is gambling too at The Cosmopolitan.

The Cosmopolitan is the last major new casino and hotel planned for Las Vegas over the next three to five years. Rates in the $200 to $300 range for the lowest category rooms over most of the next few months is a bold move in this economy.

One of the unique features of The Cosmopolitan is 70% of the nearly 3,000 hotel rooms have terrace balconies. No other major casino resort on the Las Vegas Strip offers terrace room balconies in regular hotel rooms.

Currently the lowest rates over the next several months are $135 for a Studio Terrace on January 2 and 3. You can book a Terrace Suite on these dates ($235) for less than the price of a Studio Terrace on most weekends (Studio Terrace $260 Friday Jan 28; Terrace Suite $410) for the next three months .

The rooms at The Cosmopolitan add 1.5% more rooms to Las Vegas. My gut feeling is room rates over the next few months will drop to the $120 to $150 range from their current $160 to $200 average. The Cosmopolitan will be a good indicator hotel to watch for rate fluctuation settling somewhere more specific in the Aria to Encore to Mandarin Oriental price range.

Pre-Opening Press Tour Tuesday, Dec 14

The pre-opening press tour did not permit photography inside the hotel. This Loyalty Traveler post has links to websites showing photos and videos of  The Cosmopolitan. YouTube video links uploaded by The Cosmopolitan show room tours. Room photos posted here were received from The Cosmopolitan hotel PR department.

There are five basic room types at The Cosmopolitan:

The Cosmopolitan Room Data - source: The Cosmopolitan Fact Sheet pdf press release

The two Cosmopolitan tower buildings are about 600 ft. tall. The floor numbering is creative just like at Aria Resort where floors 40-49 do not exist.  The Cosmopolitan is confusing too with guest floors starting at 15 and no room floors in the 40s.

How to fit 75 floors in a 603 ft. tower?

Las Vegas has creative floor numbering.  My memory recalls 75 as the top floor elevator button in the east tower of the Cosmopolitan. I read a review by a person who stayed on the 68th floor last week. So how does a hotel not built for hobbits get 75 floors in a 603 ft. building?

I noticed during my stay at the Aria Resort that no elevators had buttons for floors 40 to 49 in the 59 floor tower. I asked several employees about the missing floors. Nobody simply explained that no floors in the 40s exist in the hotel. The floor numbering goes directly from 39 to 50. The 59th floor penthouse is actually a 49th floor location.

Wikipedia lists the tallest buildings in Las Vegas. Aria Resort at City Center is 600 ft. and 50 floors. The Cosmopolitan East Tower I toured last week is listed at 603 ft. and 51 floors. Check out the elevator numbers when you are going up the tower. There must be a lot of missing floor numbers between the Promenade restaurant level and the 75th top floor.

The reason cited for no floors in the 40s is an association with bad luck/death in Asian cultures. Others think it is just a way to make Las Vegas hotels appear taller to hotel guests than they actually are. Encore, Wynn and Palms Place also do not have room floors in the 40s.

Room Photos

The Cosmopolitan Terrace Studio

Terrace Studio Living Room-Bedroom (photo courtesy of LV Cosmopolitan)

Terrace Studio Bathroom (photo courtesy of LV Cosmopolitan)

Terrace Studio Bed (photo courtesy of LV Cosmopolitan)

Video: The Cosmopolitan Terrace Studio (YouTube 33 sec)

 

The Cosmopolitan City Room

The Cosmopolitan Las Vegas City Room (photo courtesy of the Cosmopolitan Las Vegas)

The Cosmopolitan Las Vegas City Room beds

The Cosmopolitan Las Vegas - City Room Shower

Video: The Cosmopolitan Las Vegas City Room (YouTube – 21 sec)

The Cosmopolitan  – Terrace One Bedroom

The Cosmopolitan Las Vegas - Terrace One Bedroom

The Cosmopolitan Las Vegas - Terrace One Bedroom

Video: The Cosmopolitan Las Vegas = Terrace One Bedroom (YouTube – 27 sec.)

 

The Cosmopolitan - Terrace Suite

The Cosmopolitan Las Vegas Terrace Suite

The Cosmopolitan Terrace Suite living room

Video: The Cosmopolitan – Terrace Suite (YouTube – 49 sec.)

The Cosmopolitan Wraparound Terrace Suite

The Cosmopolitan - WrapAround Terrace Suite

The Cosmopolitan Wraparound Terrace Suite living room

The Cosmopolitan - Wraparound Terrace Suite bedroom

Video: The Cosmopolitan Wraparound Terrace Suite (YouTube – 1:03)

This Loyalty Traveler Dec 14 post shows the room view from a wraparound terrace suite on the 58th floor of the east tower.

Blog.Vegas.com has a gallery of photos of the lobby floors of the hotel and the central focal point of the hotel-casino Chandelier.

Related Posts:

Betting on Expedia.ca for a Vegas Suite Deal (Nov 20, 2010) [This post tells how I bought my flight to Las Vegas and an upgraded room at the Mandarin Oriental for $12.]

CityCenter Las Vegas – Art, Architecture and Space (Dec 16, 2010)

Hotel Detail – Aria Resort and Casino Las Vegas in HD (Dec 11, 2010)

Aria Resort Las Vegas – Pools, Spa and Dining (Dec 12, 2010)

Aria Resort Corner Suite and SkySuites (Dec 18, 2010) 

Aria Resort Las Vegas SkyVilla 19 (Dec 19, 2010)

Vdara Hotel, CityCenter Las Vegas (Dec 19, 2010)

Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas (Dec 23, 2010)

The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas (Dec 21, 2010) (The Cosmopolitan is next to Vdara Hotel, but not part of CityCenter complex. The Cosmopolitan is a Marriott Autograph Collection Hotel.)

Vdara is a mixed use condominium residences and hotel rooms in the 57-floor tower north of Harmon Avenue.  The building is part of the CityCenter MGM Resorts/Dubai World Las Vegas Strip complex between Bellagio and Monte Carlo casinos. CityCenter has three hotels on its 67-acre property with Aria Resort, Mandarin Oriental and Vdara. The imperfect blue building planned as the Harmon Hotel at the corner of Harmon and Las Vegas Boulevard in CityCenter sits empty due to construction flaws.

Vdara, CityCenter Las Vegas

Vdara seen from Aria Resort 24th floor

The Vdara Hotel location is accessible from the Aria Hotel Casino floor level via an elevated circular drive over Harmon Avenue revealing Nancy Rubins’ Big Edge, the large-scale canoe sculpture located between the two hotels.

Nancy Rubins - Big Edge

Vdara is a non-smoking, non-gaming hotel with a bar, a restaurant, a spa and pool, and a walkway to Bellagio Resort and the CityCenter electric tram station. The Cosmopolitan casino and Marriott Autograph Collection branded resort is adjacent to Vdara, between the Bellagio and the main CityCenter complex on Las Vegas Boulevard, the Strip.

Vdara and The Cosmopolitan with Bellagio in background - view from Aria

Vdara Hotel is low-key without the formality of Mandarin Oriental or the immense size of Aria Resort & Casino. Vdara Suites are large, condominium style rooms with small dining areas and kitchen space with refrigerator, microwave and stove, a sleeper couch, bedroom, two TVs and bathroom.

Vdara hotel has lower room rates than Aria for December 2010with rates as low as $119 compared to Aria at $129. Mandarin Oriental is typically the highest base room rate of the three CityCenter Hotels with lowest rates around $199.

Vdara atomic art and entrance

Vdara can save money on a Las Vegas vacation by cooking for yourself in the room kitchen rather than dining out. Silk Road provides lobby food service.

Vdara Silk Road cafe menu

Silk Road - Vdara

Vdara - Silk Road

Vdara Hotel occupies an extraordinarily convenient location between Bellagio, The Cosmopolitan and Aria for three very different resort casino experiences within five minutes walk from your room.

Vdara hotel, CityCenter Las Vegas

The lobby bar has seating in the main bar, off to the right indoors and a terrace outdoors.

Bar Vdara

Bar Vdara

Vdara Bar in lobby

Vdara Bar patio swing seat

Vdara Bar patio seating in front of the hotel.

The lobby has a small seating area near the elevators with a concierge desk cubicle off the main hotel registration desk.

Vdara lobby seating area art. Concierge desk is below Peter Wegner art.

Peter Wegner is the artist for the Vdara lobby with two pieces Day for Night, Night for Day on the east wall (orange colored paper, 45 feet x 10 feet 9 inches) and west wall (blue colored paper, 34 feet x 10 feet 9 inches).

Vdara lobby

Vdara lobby ornaments December 2010

Vdara Deluxe Suites are the basic room category and provide a kitchenette and nearly 600 sq. ft. of room space. Vdara website has a video of Deluxe Suite Option 1 floorplan. Here are my photos of this room category.

Vdara Deluxe Suite 2-person dining table

Vdara Deluxe Suite kitchen

Vdara Deluxe Suite microwave

Vdara Deluxe Suite sitting room

The sitting room had a large wall mounted TV and the bedroom also had a wall mounted TV.

Vdara Deluxe Suite bedroom TV

Vdara Deluxe Suite bed

Vdara Deluxe Suite bathroom

Vdara Deluxe Suite shower

Vdara Deluxe Suite tub

Vdara City Corner Suite

City Corner Suites are over 800 sq. ft.  with a four burner kitchen stove, full size refrigerator, four person dining table, washer-dryer, queen size sofa bed and large spa tub.

Vdara City Corner Suite dining table

Vdara City Corner Suite stove

Vdara City Corner Suite refrigerator

Vdara City Corner Suite living room

Vdara City Corner Suite desk

Vdara City Corner Suite bed

Vdara City Corner Suite tub

Vdara City Corner Suite bedroom TV

Vdara City Corner Suite view north to back side of Bellagio

Vdara Penthouse Suite

The Vdara Penthouse Suites are one and two bedroom and one floor or two floor suites. I toured a two-bedroom, one story penthouse suite on the 54th floor. This apartment space is 1,200 to 1,400 sq. ft and provides the full hotel residential style living quarters.

Vdara penthouse suite 54th floor living room

Vdara 54th floor penthouse view south to Aria Resort

Vdara penthouse suite bed

Vdara Penthouse suite kitchen

Vdara Penthouse suite dining table

Vdara penthouse suite bathroom dual sinks

Vdara penthouse suite accessible bath

Vdara penthouse suite accessible shower

Vdara Pool Deck

Vdara pool

Vdara pool deck

Vdara pool deck view of Aria Resort

pool deck view reveals curvilinear form of Vdara

Vdara view east over Harmon Ave and empty blue Harmon Hotel building at CityCenter.

Related Posts:

Betting on Expedia.ca for a Vegas Suite Deal (Nov 20, 2010) [This post tells how I bought my flight to Las Vegas and an upgraded room at the Mandarin Oriental for $12.]

CityCenter Las Vegas – Art, Architecture and Space (Dec 16, 2010)

Hotel Detail – Aria Resort and Casino Las Vegas in HD (Dec 11, 2010)

Aria Resort Las Vegas – Pools, Spa and Dining (Dec 12, 2010)

Aria Resort Corner Suite and SkySuites (Dec 18, 2010) 

Aria Resort Las Vegas SkyVilla 19 (Dec 19, 2010)

Vdara Hotel, CityCenter Las Vegas (Dec 19, 2010)

Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas (Dec 23, 2010)

The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas (Dec 21, 2010) (The Cosmopolitan is next to Vdara Hotel, but not part of CityCenter complex. The Cosmopolitan is a Marriott Autograph Collection Hotel.)

Aria Sky Villas offer two- and three-bedroom luxury suites on one or two floors on the top floors of Aria Resort & Casino. Aria Sky Villa 19 is a 58th floor bi-level three-bedroom suite with living room, dining room, bedroom, and fitness room with sauna and 2.5 bathrooms on the lower level. A spiral staircase and elevator access an upper floor with a sitting room, two bedrooms, four bathrooms, massage room, salon and kitchen pantry.

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Lounge Floor 58

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Lounge Floor 58

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19 on 58th floor

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19 living room

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, Mac computer on living room desk

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19 living room view of CityCenter Lumia Fountain

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, spiral wood and metal staircase

Aria Resort Las Vegas, view of lower and upper sitting rooms from staircase

40 to 50 people were in Sky Villa 19 at one point during the wine reception. All guests were comfortably positioned around the main living room and dining area. A bar was set up in the corner of the living room. 

Sky Villa 19 is a large space for entertaining.

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19 small dining table

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19 large dining table

The lower floor of Sky Villa 19 has a half-bathroom with toilet and sink at the main room entrance and one bedroom with full bathroom. There is a fitness room with sauna and shower and a connecting room with sink and toilet.

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, lower floor bedroom-1

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, downstairs bedroom

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19 lower floor bedroom-1 bathroom sinks

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, lower floor bedroom-1 bath

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, bedroom-1 nightstand e-panel remote

The lower floor fitness room across the hall from the bedroom has a shower, sauna and connecting toilet and dressing room. A door from the fitness dressing room leads to the main bathroom for the lower floor bedroom. 

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, fitness room

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, fitness room

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, fitness room sauna

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, fitness room shower

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, fitness room dressing room

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, fitness room doorway to dressing room

 

The second floor of Aria Sky Villa 19 is accessible by stairs and elevator. Two bedrooms, each with two full bathrooms, salon, massage room, kitchen pantry and sitting room are located on the second floor of Aria Sky Villa 19.

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, stairway to upper floor sitting room

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, upper floor living room

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, upper floor living room open space

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, in-room two-floor elevator

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, massage room

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, in-room salon

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, bedroom-2 king bed

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, bedroom-2 seating

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, bedroom-2, bathroom-1

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, bedroom-2, bathroom-1 view

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, electric toilet

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, Electronic toilet master controls

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, bedroom-2, bathroom-2 sink

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, bedroom-2, bathroom-2 shower

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, Master Bedroom

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, master bedroom-3

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, master bedroom window view

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, master bedroom couch

Aria Resort Las Vegas,, Sky Villa 19 master bedroom

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, master bedroom

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, bedroom-3, bath-1 sink

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, bedroom-3, bath-1 tub

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, bedroom-3, bath-2 sink

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, bedroom-3, bath-2 shower

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, master bedroom-3 dressing room

Aria Resort Las Vegas, Sky Villa 19, kitchen pantry refrigerator

This completes the tour of Aria Resort Sky Villa 19.

 

Related Posts:

Betting on Expedia.ca for a Vegas Suite Deal (Nov 20, 2010) [This post tells how I bought my flight to Las Vegas and an upgraded room at the Mandarin Oriental for $12.]

CityCenter Las Vegas – Art, Architecture and Space (Dec 16, 2010)

Hotel Detail – Aria Resort and Casino Las Vegas in HD (Dec 11, 2010)

Aria Resort Las Vegas – Pools, Spa and Dining (Dec 12, 2010)

Aria Resort Corner Suite and SkySuites (Dec 18, 2010) 

Aria Resort Las Vegas SkyVilla 19 (Dec 19, 2010)

Vdara Hotel, CityCenter Las Vegas (Dec 19, 2010)

Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas (Dec 23, 2010)

The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas (Dec 21, 2010) (The Cosmopolitan is next to Vdara Hotel, but not part of CityCenter complex. The Cosmopolitan is a Marriott Autograph Collection Hotel.)

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