LLMpediaThe first transparent, open encyclopedia generated by LLMs

The Park (Las Vegas)

Generated by GPT-5-mini
Note: This article was automatically generated by a large language model (LLM) from purely parametric knowledge (no retrieval). It may contain inaccuracies or hallucinations. This encyclopedia is part of a research project currently under review.
Article Genealogy
Parent: T-Mobile Arena Hop 5
Expansion Funnel Raw 52 → Dedup 0 → NER 0 → Enqueued 0
1. Extracted52
2. After dedup0 (None)
3. After NER0 ()
4. Enqueued0 ()
The Park (Las Vegas)
NameThe Park
LocationParadise, Nevada, United States
DeveloperMGM Resorts International
OwnerMGM Resorts International
Opened2016
Area150000
Notable tenantsT-Mobile Arena, Park MGM (Las Vegas), New York-New York Hotel and Casino

The Park (Las Vegas) The Park is an outdoor dining and entertainment district on the Las Vegas Strip in Paradise, Nevada, developed and operated by MGM Resorts International near T-Mobile Arena and adjacent to Park MGM (Las Vegas). The complex integrates landscaping, public art, and pedestrian circulation to connect major resorts such as New York-New York Hotel and Casino and destinations like Allegiant Stadium and Mandalay Bay while hosting live events and restaurants owned by national brands and local operators. The Park's creation reflected redevelopment trends in Las Vegas catalyzed by projects including CityCenter (Las Vegas), The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas, and Downtown Project.

History

The Park was conceived amid a wave of post-recession projects that included CityCenter (Las Vegas), SLS Las Vegas, and expansions by Caesars Entertainment Corporation; initial plans tied to the construction of T-Mobile Arena involved coordination with entities such as AEG Live and MGM Resorts International. Groundbreaking occurred after negotiations with municipal authorities in Clark County, Nevada and stakeholders including Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority; the project opened in 2016 contemporaneously with events hosted by National Hockey League franchises and concerts promoted by Live Nation Entertainment. Its development followed previous Strip transformations like the repositioning of Bellagio (resort), the renovation of MGM Grand Las Vegas, and the establishment of festivals promoted by organizations such as Life is Beautiful.

Design and Features

Designed by firms with experience on projects such as The Venetian Las Vegas and The LINQ Promenade, The Park emphasizes landscape architecture, sightlines to T-Mobile Arena, and connections to Park MGM (Las Vegas). Features include mature trees, pedestrian promenades, public art installations comparable to commissions at CityCenter (Las Vegas) and The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas, and a central plaza used for gatherings and programming curated by partners like Billboard and Cirque du Soleil. The outdoor configuration was influenced by urbanist principles applied in projects alongside Fremont Street Experience and retail planning seen at Fashion Show Mall.

Dining and Retail

The Park aggregates concepts from national chains and local chefs, echoing culinary strategies used by Eataly, Nobu (restaurant), and celebrity restaurateurs such as Gordon Ramsay, Wolfgang Puck, and Emeril Lagasse. Venues include quick-service and full-service operations that complement dining corridors in Grand Canal Shoppes and The Forum Shops at Caesars. Retail components are curated to support event traffic for promoters like AEG Presents and MGM National Harbor; tenancy strategies mirror mixed-use offerings at The Grove (Los Angeles) and destination retail corridors such as Third Street Promenade.

Entertainment and Events

Programming at The Park has included pre- and post-event activations for concerts promoted by Live Nation Entertainment, sporting events involving National Hockey League and National Basketball Association fixtures held in the region, and festivals similar in scale to Life is Beautiful and Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s Monster Jam. The plaza has hosted touring productions, brand activations by firms such as Red Bull, film screenings tied to studios like Warner Bros., and temporary exhibitions resembling pop-ups in venues like The Neon Museum. Its proximity to T-Mobile Arena enables cross-venue collaborations with residencies and shows by artists affiliated with Residency (music) deals.

Location and Access

The Park is sited on the west side of the Las Vegas Strip between Park MGM (Las Vegas) and New York-New York Hotel and Casino, adjacent to T-Mobile Arena and within walking distance of Bellagio (resort) and Aria Resort and Casino. Access is provided via pedestrian walkways linking to monorail stations such as Las Vegas Monorail stops near MGM Grand Las Vegas, taxi and rideshare zones managed by Clark County, Nevada transportation planning, and parking resources coordinated with Park MGM (Las Vegas) and T-Mobile Arena. Regional connections include proximity to Harry Reid International Airport and transit corridors used by services like RTC (Southern Nevada).

Reception and Impact

Critics and industry analysts compared The Park to urban open-space projects like The High Line and retail-entertainment complexes such as The LINQ Promenade; coverage in outlets including Las Vegas Review-Journal, Las Vegas Sun, and USA Today assessed its role in improving pedestrian circulation and complementing arena programming. Its economic impact was evaluated in the context of resort revitalizations by MGM Resorts International and tourism metrics from Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, while cultural commentators referenced its public-art commissions and event partnerships with entities like Cirque du Soleil and Billboard. The Park influenced subsequent developments on the Strip and informed debates among urban planners involved with projects such as Fremont Street Experience and casino-resort master plans.

Category:Las Vegas Strip Category:Shopping malls established in 2016