Las Vegas metropolitan area
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Las Vegas metropolitan area, includes the Las Vegas Valley a 600 square mile (1600 km²) basin, and surrounding areas, that are part of Clark County in southern Nevada. The area contains the largest concentration of people in the state. The history of the Las Vegas metropolitan area largely coincides with the history of the city of Las Vegas.
In 2005, the valley played host to 34.7 million visitors.
The area is part of the Las Vegas-Paradise, NV Metropolitan Statistical Area as defined by the United States Census Bureau which defines the area to include Clark County, Nevada.[1]
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[edit] History
The area was previously settled by Mormon farmers in 1854 and later became the site of a U.S. Army fort in 1864, beginning a long relationship between southern Nevada and the U.S. military. Since the 1930s, Las Vegas has generally been identified as a gambling center as well as a resort destination primarily targeting adults. Relatively inexpensive real estate prompted a residential population boom in the Las Vegas Valley in the 1990s and continues to the present day.
Nellis Air Force Base is located in the northeast corner of the valley. The ranges that the Nellis pilots use and various other land areas used by various federal agencies limit growth of the valley to the north.
[edit] Boundaries
[edit] Las Vegas Valley
The Las Vegas Valley is an area generally defined by the Spring Mountains on the west, Sheep Mountains to the north, Muddy Mountains, Eldorado Range and Lake Mead to the east, and the Black Mountains to the south.[citation needed]
The Las Vegas metropolitan area includes Boulder City and Blue Diamond which share common services with the other communities in the area.
[edit] Gaming areas
The State of Nevada divides the state into several gaming districts. The reporting districts affecting the Las Vegas Valley are:
- Boulder Strip: This region includes 33 casinos on Boulder Highway, such as Sam's Town, Boulder Station, Arizona Charlie's Boulder, and the Magic Star. Casinos within the Henderson city limits are included as well, such as Green Valley Ranch, Sunset Station, Fiesta, Eldorado, and Jokers Wild.
- Downtown: There are 19 casinos in this reporting area.
- Las Vegas Strip: This region is composed of all the casinos on Las Vegas Boulevard, from The Stratosphere at the north end to Mandalay Bay on the south end. Also included are resorts located near this area, such as The Palms, The Orleans, The Rio, Gold Coast, and the Hard Rock.
- Laughlin: This area has 10 casinos.
- Mesquite
- North Las Vegas: This region has 11 casinos and include the Fiesta, Texas Station, Jerry's Nugget, and the Santa Fe Station.
- Remainder of County: There are 66 casinos in this category that includes casinos at Lake Las Vegas, Jean, Primm, the Railroad Pass and Hacienda casinos, along with other casinos that don't fit any other category such as Arizona Charlie's Decatur, Suncoast, South Point and Rampart.
[edit] Geography and environment
The land in the Las Vegas Valley is sandy desert with mountains in the distance.
[edit] Climate
The Las Vegas Valley lies in the (relatively) high altitude Mojave Desert that can result in drastic changes of temperature between seasons, even day and night. The Valley generally averages less than five inches (130 mm) of rain annually. Daily summer temperatures from June through August typically exceed 100 °F (38 °C). While low ambient humidity tempers the effect of these temperatures, dehydration, heat exhaustion, and sun stroke can occur after even a limited time outdoors in the summer. The interiors of automobiles often prove deadly to small children and pets during the summer and surfaces exposed to the sun can cause first- and second- degree burns to unprotected skin. The late summer, especially in August and September, is marked by "monsoon season" when moist winds from the Gulf of California soak much of the Southwestern United States. While raising humidity levels, these winds develop into dramatic desert thunderstorms that cause flash flooding.
Winter temperatures are very mild with lows of around 30 °F (-1 °C). Snow accumulation at the valley floor is rare but the surrounding mountains receive as much as ten feet (3 m) in the winter.
[edit] Air quality
Being located in a desert valley creates issues with air quality. From the dust the wind picks up from disturbed desert, to the smog produced by vehicles to the pollen in the air, the valley can have some bad air days.
Pollen can be a major issue several weeks a year with counts occasionally in the 70,000 plus range. Local governments are trying to control this by banning plants that produce the most pollen.
The dust problems usually happen on very windy days, so they tend to be seasonal and of a short duration.
Smog on the other hand gets worst when there is no wind to move the air out of the valley. Also in winter it is possible to get an inversion in the valley air that actually traps any smog in the valley.
The county is working to control these problems and has shown some success over the years. The constant tightening of Federal requirements for allowable particles in the air, make the task of meeting air quality standards difficult.
[edit] Water
The native flora does little to help the soil retain water. During the intense rains of monsoon season or (relatively) wet months of January and February, a network of dry natural channels, called washes or arroyos, carved into the valley floor allows water to flow down from the mountains and converge in the Las Vegas Wash which runs through the Clark County Wetlands Park. The wash system used to form a large natural wetlands which then flowed into the Colorado River until the construction of Hoover Dam on the Colorado River led to the creation of Lake Mead. Further development in the 1980s and 1990s made Lake Las Vegas, which required directing the Las Vegas Wash into tunnels which run under Lake Las Vegas and into Lake Mead.
The Las Vegas area is limited to about 300,000 acre feet (370,000,000 m³) of water each year from Lake Mead, with credits for water it returns to the lake. The allocations were made when Nevada had virtually no people or agriculture. The allocations were also made during a wet string of years which overstated the available water in the entire watershed. As a result, precipitation that is below normal for a few years can have a major impact on the Colorado River Reservoirs.
Early Vegas depended on the aquifer which fed the springs, but the pumping of water from these caused a large drop in the water levels and ground subsidence over wide areas of the valley. Today, the aquifers are basically used to store water that is pumped from the lake during periods of low demand and pumped out during periods of high demand.
[edit] Urbanization
The population doubling time in the greater metropolitan area was under ten years since the early 1970s and the Las Vegas metropolitan area now has a population of over two million people. This rapid population growth led to a significant urbanization of desert lands into industrial and commercial areas, but, by and large, low-density, single-family tract homes (see suburbia).
[edit] Economy
The driving force is the tourism industry. In the past the casinos were the one major attraction. Now shopping, conventions and fine dining are also major forces in attracting the tourist dollar. With about 130,000 hotel rooms, as of 2005, to fill, the conventions help fill the hotels, destination restaurants, and shopping malls on the Strip.
There is a balance between all of the tourist operations in town. The conventions need hotel rooms, dining, and entertainment options. The hotels need the conventions, and tourists to fill their rooms. The restaurants depend on travelers in the hotel rooms to fill their tables. Everyone depends on a good road system to get travelers into town as well as available and reasonably priced airline seats.
Over the past few years, retirees have been moving to the valley driving businesses that support them, from housing to health care.
Las Vegas has been trying to expand its manufacturing and research base. There have been some positive signs from the World Market Center being developed in the city and opening of Lou Ruvo Alzheimer's Institute in 2007 in addition to many smaller businesses.
While the cost of housing spiked up over 40% in 2004, the lack of business and income taxes still makes Nevada an attractive place for many companies to relocate to as well as expand into. Being a true 24 hour town, call centers have always seemed to find Vegas a good place to find workers willing to work at all hours.
Construction is strong. New strip casinos take years to build and employ thousands of workers. The same could be said of the housing boom with new home sales around 15,000 units in 2004. With the introduction of Turnburry Towers several years ago, developers discovered that the was a large demand for high-end condominiums. At the end of 2004, it was estimated that as many as 80 major condominiums were in various stages of development.
[edit] Housing
Slab-on-grade foundations is the common base for residential buildings in the area.
[edit] Las Vegas Neighborhoods
- Alliante
- Alta Drive/Scotch 80's/Rancho Circle/Rancho Bel Air
- Anthem
- Desert Shores
- Green Valley
- Lake Las Vegas
- Los Prados
- Painted Desert
- Paradise Palms
- Mountains Edge
- Queensridge
- Rancho Sierra Estates
- Seven Hills
- Southern Highlands
- Summerlin
- The Lakes
- West Las Vegas — area bordered by Carey to the North, Bonanza to the South, MLK to the West, and I-15 to the East. Contains many "letter" streets, streets named after Presidents, and streets named after jewelry.
[edit] Incorporated cities
[edit] Unincorporated cities
- Enterprise
- Paradise
- Spring Valley
- Summerlin South
- Sunrise Manor
- Whitney (formerly known as East Las Vegas)
- Winchester
[edit] Media
[edit] Broadcast
[edit] Newspapers
- Boulder City News is a weekly newspaper, serving Boulder City
- Gamingwire an online news service about gaming and relted topics
- Henderson Home News is a weekly newspaper, serving the Henderson, owned by Greenspun Media Group, publishers of the Sun.
- Las Vegas Advisor
- Las Vegas Business Press
- Las Vegas CityLife weekly paper
- Las Vegas Review-Journal
- Las Vegas Sun
- Las Vegas Weekly is an alternative weekly paper owned by Greenspun Media Group, publishers of the Sun.
- Summerlin News and its sister West Valley News serving Summerlin and Spring Valley, owned by Greenspun Media Group, publishers of the Sun.
- Valley Times is a defunct newspaper that was discontinued around 1985. It covered the North Las Vegas area in the 1970s and 1980s.
[edit] Magazines
- Las Vegas Life
- Las Vegas Style
- S
- 215-South
- QVegas
[edit] Culture
[edit] Libraries
[edit] Museums
- Atomic Testing Museum
- Barrick Natural History Museum
- Bellagio Gallery of Fine Art
- Clark County Heritage Museum
- Elvis-A-Rama Museum
- Guinness World of Records
- Guggenheim Hermitage Museum
- Hollywood Movie Museum
- Hoover Dam Museum
- Imperial Palace Auto Collection
- Las Vegas Art Museum
- Las Vegas Natural History Museum
- Liberace Museum
- Lied Discovery Children's Museum
- The Lost City Museum
- Lost Vegas Gambling Museum
- Madame Tussauds
- Neon Museum at the Fremont Street Experience
- Nevada State Museum
- Nevada State Railroad Museum
- Pinball Hall of Fame
- Carroll Shelby Museum
- Southern Nevada Museum of Fine Art
- Thunderbird Museum
[edit] Music Festivals
- Las Vegas Music Festival
- Vegoose
[edit] Parks
- Clark County Wetlands Park
- Sunset Park[1] located at Sunset and Pecos is one of the largest[2]
- Desert Breeze Park
[edit] Sports
Las Vegas is the home of the following minor league teams:
Club | League | Venue | Established | Championships |
---|---|---|---|---|
Las Vegas 51s | Pacific Coast League | Cashman Field | 1983 | 2 |
Las Vegas Wranglers | ECHL | Orleans Arena | 2003 | 0 |
Las Vegas Gladiators | Arena Football League | Orleans Arena | 2003 | 0 |
[edit] Education
[edit] Primary and secondary
- Public schools
- The Clark County School District operates all of the public primary and secondary schools in the county with the exception of a few which are contracted out to a private organization.
- Private schools:
- The Alexander Dawson School at Rainbow Mountain
- Bishop Gorman High School
- Faith Lutheran High School
- Calvary Chapel Christian School
- Calvary Church Christian School
- The Milton I. Schwartz Hebrew Academy
- Las Vegas Day School
- The Meadows School
- Merryhill School
- Mountain View Christian School
- Paradise Christian Academy[2]
- Shiloh Christian School
- St. Viator School (Las Vegas, Nevada)
- Trinity Christian School
- New Horizons Academy
- University Baptist Academy
[edit] Colleges and universities
- Public Schools
- University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV) is the major higher education institution in Las Vegas;
- University of Nevada, Reno (UNR) also has a campus for the School of Medicine in Las Vegas;
- Nevada State College located in Henderson, Nevada;
- Community College of Southern Nevada - formerly known as the Clark County Community College.
- Private schools 4 year+
- Design Institute
- National University of Nevada
- Touro University Nevada
- University of Phoenix-Nevada
- University of Southern Nevada, Doctor of Pharmacy degree