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Where to Stay on the Las Vegas Strip

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Home to seven of the world’s 10 largest hotels, Las Vegas is incomparable in its scale and scope. Densely packed on the 4.2-mile Strip, colossal resorts and casinos line the street in the only city in the world where you’ll find Eiffel Tower across the street from the Colosseum. From opulent resorts to sleek boutique hotels, here’s a roundup of where to stay in Sin City.

Delano Las Vegas

Delano

Previously known as THE Hotel at the Mandalay Bay, the revamped Delano Las Vegas was unveiled in 2014 on the south end of the Las Vegas Strip. A sleek, golden tower that stands 45 stories high, the 1,117 all-suite hotel is the rare property on the Strip that doesn’t have a casino and is smoke-free.  Start the day with a rejuvenating soak in the posh BATHHOUSE Spa, where heated whirlpools and a cold plunge pool offer a welcome escape from the hubbub of the Strip. Lunch on site is a farm-to-table experience at Della’s Kitchen, with an expansive menu of standouts, namely their sweet potato tots, the Farmhouse Club, and their Delano Burger, topped with blue cheese and bacon jam. You’ll want to save room for dinner, as acclaimed chef Alain Ducasse’s Rivea serves the most scenic dinner in town, with unparalleled views of the city in the hotel’s indoor/outdoor penthouse. The Italian and Mediterranean-inspired dining experience steals focus with its playful small plates—notably the crispy socca (chickpea pancakes) and the stuffed calamari—and main courses that include seared sea scallops primavera and a roasted duck breast.

The LINQ Hotel & Casino

The Linq

Having undergone a $223-million renovation of Caesars Entertainment’s centrally located property formerly known as The Quad, The LINQ Hotel & Casino was unveiled in 2014. A complete transformation from its former digs, The LINQ features 2,640 renovated rooms and suites and with two new pools that buzz with DJs and craft beer bars. As for entertainment in the complex, Frank Marino’s Divas fits the bill with a rotating cast of female impersonators channeling the likes of Britney Spears and Katy Perry. However, no diva can attract as much attention as the towering High Roller, the LINQ’s giant new Ferris wheel that towers 550 feet over the property with 28 40-person cabins.

The Cromwell

Cromwell

The only standalone boutique hotel on the Strip, The Cromwell’s central location and hopping nightclub scene make the newly renewed property—it was Bill’s Gamblin’ Hall and Saloon until 2014—a top spot for the younger set. The 188 rooms and suites are boudoir-inspired, with dark wood furniture and purple accents along with oversized walk-in showers, ample space, and high-end toiletries. Perhaps the main benefit of a stay at The Cromwell is free access to Drai’s Beach Club & Nightclub and Drai’s After Hours, two hotspots that top many of Vegas’s party lists. As the night winds down along the strip, Drai’s After Hours is just getting started with its party-all-night hours that start at 1 am and keep the music hopping till breakfast at 10 am.

W Hotel at SLS

W Hotel

Appealing to an upscale, sophisticated urban traveler, W Hotel arrives on the Vegas Strip in fall 2016, transforming the current LUX at SLS 289 all-suite tower at the SLS Las Vegas. Guests can expect signatures of the W brand including a plush hotel lobby and WET, a refreshed outdoor pool and bar scene. The new partnership welcomes SLS Las Vegas into the Starwood’s Tribute Portfolio, allowing customers to use Starwood Preferred Guest points for bookings in SLS resort’s 1,324 rooms.

Julius Tower at Caesars Palace

Julius

Some of the newest luxury rooms on the Strip, Caesars Palace’s Julius Tower welcomed its first guest on New Year’s Day of this year. Transforming the resort’s original tower to the tune of a $75 million renovation, the 587-room tower features new modern interiors that pop with accents of yellow and blue. Top-of-the-line 55-inch TVs, spacious stone showers, and expansive vanities with an homage to Greek columns are among the highlights of the tower that dates back almost 50 years. For a relaxing afternoon, take a dip in the sprawling Roman-styled pools (a total of eight dot the property!). The main attraction is the sprawling Neptune Pool, a pristine oasis for a refreshing cool down.

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10 Boutique Hotels in Las Vegas

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PHOTO: © Erik Kabik/erikkabik.com

The Las Vegas Strip has long been the goliath of the hospitality universe, home to 15 resorts with more than 3,000 rooms. Recently, however, several properties have tried to scale down and personalize the experience for visitors who don’t like feeling lost in the shuffle. Smaller wings at existing hotels, upscale rebrandings, and repurposed properties in the shadows of their gigantic neighbors are all offering a more intimate experience. To be fair, these wouldn’t qualify as boutique hotels anywhere else, but in a “bigger is better” city like Las Vegas, these properties are offering truly unique experiences.

by Steve Friess

Steve Friess is a freelance writer based in Ann Arbor, Mich. From 1996 to 2011, he lived and covered Las Vegas for dozens of major publications including Conde Nast Traveler, The New York Times, The L.A. Times and Travel + Leisure. He was author of three guidebooks about Las Vegas including the first and only one for LGBT travelers, Gay Vegas. And yes, he is aware it gets cold in Michigan. Follow Steve on Twitter: @stevefriess.

PHOTO: Caesars Entertainment

The Cromwell

The 188-room Cromwell, which opened this spring after a $186 million makeover of the ultra-seedy Barbary Coast, trades heavily on its status as, at least by Vegas standards, a “boutique” hotel. The Cromwell’s small size allows for sit-down check-in stations, complementary coffee and flavored waters on every guest floor, free daily newspaper delivery, and a fabulous, cozy 11th floor rooftop pool with great views of the Bellagio Fountains. The decadent Parisian décor bespeaks intimacy, with dim-lit hallways leading to rooms of textured lavender wallpaper, furniture resembling vintage leather-studded luggage, and a one-way shower glass that doubles as a full-length mirror in the room. One thing that is big at the Cromwell: Giada, the spectacular 260-seat Italian restaurant from celebrity chef Giada De Laurentiis.

Insider Tip: Unique among casino-resorts here, guests are treated to free breakfast at a buffet in the casino bar area that includes an omelet station, fresh-squeezed juice, and an impressive oatmeal bar.

PHOTO: Caesars Entertainment

Nobu Hotel

Nestled at the center of the sprawling, 4,000-room Caesars Palace is an oasis in the form of the renovated, rebranded tower now known as Nobu Hotel. The famed Japanese chef and restaurateur’s first hotel has 181 rooms designed by Rockwell Group to evoke Far East zen, complete with cherry blossom art, rosemary-and-white-tea Natura Bissé bath products, and oversized walk-in showers with multiple showerheads and a teak stool. Check-in sets the tone, with complimentary green tea in a lobby adorned with hand-carved blocks of wood from three types of Japanese wood. Co-owner Robert DeNiro is a frequent guest.

Insider Tip: Guests receive priority seating at the adjacent 12,775-square-foot Nobu Restaurant and lounge, the largest of the namesake chef’s 30 eateries worldwide. Also available only to Nobu room guests is a 24-hour, in-room dining menu featuring highlights from the Nobu menu.

PHOTO: Courtesy of Mandarin Oriental, Las Vegas

Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas

The 47-story non-gaming Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas boasts just 392 rooms (there are also 20 floors of private residences) in a gleaming silver tower. Veteran hospitality designer Adam Tihany brings all the elegance and Asian touches you’d expect from a Mandarin, most notably ubiquitous geometric shapes and lines as well as headboards fashioned from mother of pearl. Shanghai Tang makes the toiletries, Frette supplies the plush bathrobes, and French molecular gastronomy pioneer Pierre Gagnaire provides the property’s luxury dining at Twist.

Insider Tip: The 23rd-floor Mandarin Bar has become one of the hippest places on the Strip to have a cocktail and watch the sun set or, this being Vegas, rise.

PHOTO: Courtesy of MGM Resorts International

SkyLOFTS at MGM Grand

The 29th and 30th floors of the gigantic MGM Grand boast 51 two-story flats appointed like modern loft apartments, complete with an average of eight TVs per unit, 24-hour butler service, 15 different styles of pillows to choose from, a champagne-bubble tub, and a shower-turned-steam room. Guests are fetched from the airport in Rolls-Royce Ghost limos and whisked through a private entrance and up a VIP elevator to be greeted by the butler to familiarize them with the many high-tech gizmos therein. Most impressive is the Crestron environment console from which guests control the climate, lights, TV, and drapes.

Insider Tip: Guests of the SkyLOFTS get their own business cards and personalized stationery during their visit.

PHOTO: Courtesy of MGM Resorts International

Hotel32 at Monte Carlo

Perhaps only in Vegas would a fire that engulfed the upper floors of a casino-resort become an opportunity to reposition a property, but it is from that auspicious event—in which nobody was hurt—that these 50 rooms would become “a boutique hotel atop Monte Carlo.” Occupants of the other 2,950 rooms are decidedly excluded from the private elevator and on-floor “suite assistant,” as well as access to the private lounge where free drinks, breakfast, snacks, and evening hors d’oeuvres are served. Hotel32 guests are also entitled to free clothes pressing and shoe shines, and the rooms are equipped with Keurig machines as well as Kiehl’s bath amenities.

Insider Tip: A proprietary Hotel32 app lets guests order drinks poolside, buy tickets, or request turndown service. Guests without mobile devices, in fact, can borrow them from the property for free, too.

PHOTO: Courtesy of MGM Resorts International

Four Seasons at Mandalay Bay

The original hotel-within-a-hotel on the Strip is the Four Seasons, which elegantly occupies floors 35 to 39 of the Mandalay Bay. With 400 rooms, including 81 suites, it’s now on the large side of the “boutique” trend but all the hallmarks are there, from the separate entrance and check-in, to two secluded restaurants including Charlie Palmer Steak that is open to all, but caters to Four Seasons guests. The Four Seasons Las Vegas also boasts a quiet private pool where attendants will spritz water on sunbathers upon request.

Insider Tip: The Four Seasons positions itself as an upscale, kid-friendly antidote to Sin City, with children’s menus in the restaurants and board games and DVDs available from the house library, as well as complementary popcorn and soda at check-in.

PHOTO: Courtesy of Palms Casino Resort

Palms Place

Palms Place is technically a 58-story, 599-suite luxury condominium building, but on any given day, most of the owners open their fully appointed, hardwood-floored units for rent. Palms Place is connected to the always-trendy Palms Casino-Resort by a covered walkway, so it’s close enough to the action without being immersed in it. The tower’s Drift Spa & Hammam offers Vegas’ only Turkish co-ed steam bath.

Insider Tip: The Sunday Pajama Brunch from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Simon Restaurant & Lounge on the sixth floor is among Vegas’ trendiest events. The menu ranges widely from stuffed French toast to fresh-rolled sushi to cotton candy.

PHOTO: © Erik Kabik/erikkabik.com

HRH All-Suite Tower at Hard Rock

Sensing that some once-young hipsters were aging out of the traditional rock ‘n’ roll conceit of the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, the owners spent new $750 million on a 374-suite tower with its own porte-cochère, concierge, and a VIP lounge adorned with a photo of a 1970s-era Bruce Springsteen holding his finger to his mouth, as if to tell visitors they’re now in on a secret. The HRH tower caters perfectly to its clientele, complete with hardwood planks in the foyer, dimpled black porcelain walling, a gigantic cast-iron tub-for-two, and the requisite nostalgia-inducing classic rocker photos. In line with the music-centric theme is the most impressive in-room tech feature: wall panels that allow guests to slide in their iPods and play it through speakers throughout the suite. Or, use the touch screen to select from one of the preset, ever-changing song lists.

Insider Tip: Reliquary Spa, also in the HRH Tower, is known for its 1,500-square-foot Roman Bath and a gym where women can take a stripper class.

PHOTO: Courtesy of Rumor Boutique Hotel

RUMOR

RUMOR, the product of a $4-million makeover of a defunct Palm Springs-style hotel across the street from the Hard Rock Hotel, has replaced the SoCal vibe with a charcoal-and-deep-purple color palate, a white marble lobby, and chrome accents. The unusual layout—150 suites in low-slung buildings that surround a lush courtyard—allows for a certain intimacy and solitude that’s rare elsewhere in Vegas.

Insider Tip: RUMOR is known as being among the most pet-friendly Vegas offerings and proves it with Yappy Hour, a third-Thursday open invitation for guests and locals to congregate with their pooches on the courtyard green for appetizers, live DJ music, and a complimentary bag of doggie treats.

PHOTO: Barbara Kraft

Tower Suites at Wynn

Steve Wynn has said his biggest regret about his masterwork, Bellagio, was that it was too big, wide, and impersonal. So when he built Wynn Las Vegas, he made the building tall and skinny to reduce walking distances and left a southerly column as an exquisite sub-hotel known as the 296-unit Tower Suites. Tower Suites guests are given white-glove treatment that includes a separate entrance and check-in, access to a Tower Suites pools and private terrace, and daily breakfast for two at Tableau. The suites are adorned in sleek cream and beige tones with expansive bathrooms that boast super-large Turkish bath towels and a proprietary line of lemongrass-scented toiletries called Bambu.

Insider Tip: The ground floor of the Tower Suites feature the Fairway Villas that open onto the Tom Fazio-designed Wynn Golf Course. Wynn himself lives in the 4,500-square-foot villa, featured in Architectural Digest.

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Fall 2014 Guide to Las Vegas

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Delano Las Vegas

Before this past August, the last major resort to pop up was was The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas in December 2010. By Vegas standards, that’s a long time for the Strip skyline to go unchanged—but fall 2014 could mark the beginning of one of the city’s biggest transformations in more than 10 years. Here’s our guide to what you need to know if you’re visiting Las Vegas soon.

The New Las Vegas

Las Vegas sign

Since the early 2000s, Las Vegas has undergone a series of reinventions in fits and starts. First was a short-lived attempt to turn Vegas into a family destination—that approach didn’t work out. Sin City quickly recovered its adult-excess ethos, and a luxury-resort building boom took place from 2003–2007, when Wynn, Palazzo, Encore, and Trump ascended to cater to the pampered. In 2008, when the economy crashed, Vegas was hit particularly hard and virtually all construction was halted. CityCenter finally broke through in 2010, adding Mandarin Oriental and Aria, and Vegas has been growing ever since.

With visitors increasingly spending their money on dining, shopping, and entertainment rather than gambling, many resorts over the past few years have changed from within, renovating and adding a host of new shows, restaurants, and clubs. But this fall, you’ll see some top-to-bottom developments that have reshaped both the skyline and the street-level view.

On the Rise

SLS Las Vegas

Change is in the air, literally, as a number of new properties soar from Strip. With three towers on the site of the former Sahara resort, the SLS Las Vegas introduces some much needed vivacity to the far north end. Opened in August and featuring design elements by Philippe Starck; high-end suites by Lenny Kravitz’s Kravitz Design Inc.; and three nightclubs, including an outpost of L.A.’s Sayers Club; the SLS could inject a hip quotient to the north Strip much like the Palms did to the West Side in the early 2000s. The SLS features nine unique dining concepts that are overseen by chef José Andrés, the property’s culinary director, as well as a10,000-square-foot retail space from Fred Segal.

Delano Las Vegas

The all-suite 1,100-room Delano Las Vegas, which opened in September, blends elements of South Beach with desert motifs such as petrified wood sculptures and Mojave Desert boulders. Guests of the Delano enjoy access to all the amenities of Mandalay Bay from a boutique-y home base that includes quiet retreats for rest and repast. The Delano’s BATHHOUSE Spa features locally inspired treatments such as the Desert Stone—a warm-stone, sage, and lemon-blossom massage—and the Red Rock Anti-Aging Body Treatment. Della’s Kitchen presents a menu of locally sourced ingredients and vegetables from the Delano’s greenhouse, as well as entrees created from sustainable, grass-fed beef, and hormone- and antibiotic-free chicken. At the elegant Franklin lounge, craft cocktails and select spirits such as Woodford Reserve Double Oaked bourbon and Black Barrel Mt. Gay rum are served in a sophisticated space with hues of deep blue and bronze.

In early November, Caesar’s will open the doors to the LINQ Hotel and Casino, a complete reimagination of The Quad Resort. According to Caesar’s president of hospitality, the modern LINQ resort is designed for the “socially engaged traveler” and promises a “digitally curated resort experience.” Technological amenities include automated check-in, a concierge touchscreen, and free Wi-Fi everywhere (a first for Vegas resorts). The 2,256-room resort will integrate seamlessly with the LINQ promenade, the outdoor entertainment streetscape that has everything from bars to bakeries, self-serve margarita joints, clothing stores, and Brooklyn Bowl, an exciting concert venue/bowling alley.

Towering above the LINQ complex is the High Roller. The giant Ferris wheel has been spinning high (550 feet high, making it the tallest observation wheel in the world) above the center Strip since March 2014. It’s a hugely popular attraction, and starting in September a Family Hour Package is available on Saturday mornings: For $49.95, families can ride the wheel before it opens to the general public. The price includes two adult and three children’s tickets, three High Roller binoculars, which riders can keep, and three juice drinks from the Sky Lounge.

New Attractions

Monte Carlo plaza

Changes to the Strip are on the ground as well as in the air. Strolling Las Vegas Boulevard and taking in its outdoor spectacles has long been a favorite pastime for visitors. Free attractions such as the Volcano at the Mirage and the Bellagio Fountains have made self-guided walks a must-do activity. But navigating the Strip on foot isn’t always easy. There are bottlenecks in many spots, cars (particularly taxis) whiz across to get in and out of resort entrances, and crowded pedestrian bridges are the only way to cross multi-lane avenues. But this fall the sidewalks are expanding considerably, with a number of spaces that will give Las Vegas Boulevard a much-needed series of spacious squares and plazas for pedestrians to shop, eat, dine, relax, and people-watch.

On the south Strip, Monte Carlo and New York-New York have converted their entrances to create a “vibrant patio culture” that introduces a number of casual bars, eateries, and shops. Look for new-to-Las Vegas establishments such as Double Barrel roadhouse, Japanese street-food restaurant Yusho, and BLVD Creamery fronting Monte Carlo. Among New York-New-York’s additions are a two-story Hershey’s Chocolate World and an extension of the popular Nine Fine Irishmen bar. The expanded entryways are the first phase of The Park, an 8-acre oasis with natural landscaping, water features, and plenty of cafés and bistros, scheduled for completion in 2016.

At the center of the Strip, Bally’s is due to open the Grand Bazaar Shops in December. It remains to be seen if this two-acre “outdoor shopping mecca” will improve or impede foot traffic. If it’s properly laid out, it will give visitors an opportunity to effortlessly browse more than 100 new stores and improve the flow of one of the busiest sections of the Strip. If not, it still promises to deliver a unique shopping experience that reproduces the feel of international open-air markets.

Other Notable Happenings

Carson Kitchen

In addition to the many large-scale projects reshaping the Vegas landscape, there are a number of exciting individual events happening around town this fall.

Victor Drai, considered by many to be the king of Las Vegas nightlife, recently opened Liaison Nightclub, the first LGBT club on the Strip.

In early September, chef Tony Hu opened Lao Sze Chuan at the Palms Casino. Its menu expands on Hu’s original Chicago restaurant’s offerings with a selection of Mandarin, Cantonese, Hunan, and Shanghai dishes made exclusively for the Palms.

Elizabeth Blau and Kim Canteenwalla, creators of local favorite Honey Salt, introduced Made.LV to the growing number of restaurants at Tivoli Village in Summerlin. Described by Blau as a casual American tavern, Made.LV features creative comfort foods and an extensive beer and wine list.

Downtown, which has been enjoying a renaissance of its own since Zappos.com renovated the old City Hall and installed their headquarters there, welcomes a new restaurant from chef Kerry Simon. Nearby, Carson Kitchen opened in late August inside the old John E. Carson Hotel. All entrees are under $20, and the menu features such crowd-pleasers as the butter burger, short rib sliders, and a cocoa-espresso NY strip steak.

In music news, KISS will establish their first-ever residency, KISS Rocks Vegas, at the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino, starting November 5. And the Venetian will present Georgia on My Mind: Celebrating the Music of Ray Charles from September 18 through October 29. The Charles tribute is an all-star affair, featuring Clint Holmes, TAKE 6, and Nneena Freelon, accompanied by the Las Vegas Mass Choir.

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Checking In: Delano Las Vegas

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The Delano Las Vegas, which opened in September, is a collaboration between MGM Resorts International and Morgans Hotel Group and aims to replicate the service and style of the Delano South Beach. A short ride from McCarran International Airport, the gleaming, gold 43-story tower, situated at the southern end of the Las Vegas Strip, houses a staggering 1,117 suites. This all-suite concept offers a trifecta of pleasant surprises—there’s no smoking, no casino facilities (although you’re mere yards away from the Mandalay Bay game floor), and for those inclined to travel with animals, the hotel is pet-friendly. The Delano, part of an intricate series of hotels within hotels that includes Mandalay Bay and Four Seasons, manages to maintain its own unique footprint.

The stone entrance, flanked by two colossal Mojave Desert boulders (weighing over 6 tons), features oversize wood-slatted doors. Inside, the lobby is a showcase of warm woods and cascading white sheers draped over pillars. A suspended rock sculpture by Korean artist Jaehyo Lee hangs from the ceiling and behind it sits a sleek black-marble reception desk and concierge. The signature scents, green-tea-and-lemongrass (day) and black-tea-fig (at night) drift through the air, as does the sexy lounge music.

Rates: Depending on the season, King and Queen Suites start at $200 and are priced by view (views of the Las Vegas Strip command higher prices) while Panoramic Suites (a total of 140) and luxurious Superior Suites (only 6) start at $429.

Rooms: The hotel’s standard 725-square-foot suites include a living room, bedroom, bathroom and extra half bath. The rooms pay homage to the Mojave Desert with a mix of muted grays, whites, blacks, and pops of gold. You won’t miss the suggestive underwater photography by George Kyriakos (a tribute to the South Beach property) and other signature elements like oversized tufted headboards and white linens. Lodging amenities include free WiFi, 46″ flat-screen TVs, Kuerig coffeemakers, and ice buckets that are replicas of Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s lucky hatbox. The bathrooms feature a marble shower and soaking tub with oversize Malin + Goetz toiletries and uber-soft chenille robes. At night, turndown service leaves thoughtful quote cards and mints. The Panoramic Suites offer stunning 180-degree views, while the sprawling Superior Suites are perfect for hosting your own cocktail party.

Drinks & Dining: Miles away from Starbucks, 3940 Coffee and Tea, set in a mod communal space, is perfect for artisan roast coffees, teas, and specialty concoctions like tiramisu lattes and freshly squeezed juices. The farm-to-table Della’s Kitchen serves comfort food and seasonal dishes with ingredients from their own greenhouse. The lobby’s bar Franklin is a moody space for drinks, small bites, and rotating DJs. Chef Alain Ducasse’s iconic, all-white Stanley Kubrick-esque Mix offers sweeping, floor-to-ceiling city views and French-influenced cuisine. The night owls retreat to Mix Lounge for handcrafted cocktails (expect a reconcept and design overhaul in 2015).

 Health & Fitness: The dark, spacious, 14,000-square-foot BATHOUSE Spa provides 12 treatment rooms with Asian, Indian, and European influences, and features the locally inspired Desert Stone massage. A spa pass (staring at $25) grants guests access to hot and cold plunge pools, eucalyptus steam rooms, and redwood saunas. The workout-inclined can procure a gym pass for $15 or use Mandalay Bay’s Cardio Center (complimentary).

Entertainment

Just outside the lobby, Michael Jackson’s One by Cirque du Soleil, an energetic musical salute to the late King of Pop, is a fun, dazzling show. The late-night dancing set will undoubtedly get their groove on at Light Night Club (also by Cirque du Soleil).

Pros: Without a cigarette, blackjack table, or slot machine in sight, the understated Delano maintains a boutique feel with a welcoming un-Vegas-like vibe. Don’t miss the daily uplifting quotes chalked on the lobby mirror, friendly service, and and creative food and beverage options.

Cons: Most northern suites offer only partial views of the Strip—the pyramidal Luxor Hotel obstructs most of the neon desert backdrop—so ask for a room on a higher floor. While the beds are cushy, the overly firm pillows make sleeping difficult. Currently, there’s no pool complex (guests can access the Mandalay Bay Beach pools). Look for the splashy Delano Beach Club to debut in late 2015.

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