Hacienda (resort)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hacienda_(resort) an entity of type: Thing

The Hacienda was a hotel and casino on the Las Vegas Strip in Paradise, Nevada, that operated from 1956 to 1996. It was opened by Warren Bayley, who owned other Hacienda properties in California as well. Bayley opened the hotel portion in June 1956, although the opening of the casino was delayed as the Nevada Gaming Control Board objected to his choice of casino manager, Jake Kozloff. The casino portion eventually opened on October 17, 1956. The $6 million property had 266 rooms and the largest pool on the Las Vegas Strip. Like its sister properties in California, the resort included a neon sign that depicted a cowboy riding a palomino horse. rdf:langString
Hacienda – w przeszłości stanowił hotel i kasyno, który funkcjonował przy bulwarze Las Vegas Strip w latach 1956–1996. Był własnością Standard Motels, Inc., a zarazem czwartym obiektem należącej do korporacji sieci hoteli Hacienda. Pozostałe znajdowały się we Fresno, Bakersfield oraz Indio. Przed wejściem do hotelu widniał ogromny znak "Horse and Rider", który obecnie jest częścią ekspozycji w muzeum Neon Museum. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Hacienda (resort)
rdf:langString Hacienda
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xsd:integer 742345
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xsd:integer 3950
rdf:langString Homer A. Rissman
rdf:langString Circus Circus Enterprises
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Paul Lowden
rdf:langString Argent Corporation
rdf:langString Allen R. Glick and Eugene Fresch
rdf:langString Joan Rashbrook and Calvin Magleby
rdf:langString Judy Bayley
rdf:langString Warren Bayley
rdf:langString United States Las Vegas Boulevard#Nevada
xsd:string 36.08861111111111 -115.1775
rdf:langString The Hacienda was a hotel and casino on the Las Vegas Strip in Paradise, Nevada, that operated from 1956 to 1996. It was opened by Warren Bayley, who owned other Hacienda properties in California as well. Bayley opened the hotel portion in June 1956, although the opening of the casino was delayed as the Nevada Gaming Control Board objected to his choice of casino manager, Jake Kozloff. The casino portion eventually opened on October 17, 1956. The $6 million property had 266 rooms and the largest pool on the Las Vegas Strip. Like its sister properties in California, the resort included a neon sign that depicted a cowboy riding a palomino horse. The Hacienda was built at the south end of the Strip, making it the first resort to be seen by tourists driving up from California. The Hacienda was located by itself at the time, a distance away from other resorts. Because of its location, most guests did not bother to visit the other resorts. The Hacienda was the first Las Vegas resort to target a family clientele, and until 1962, it operated a plane service to fly in guests from out of state. When Bayley died in 1964, his wife Judy Bayley took over the Hacienda. At the time, she was the only female casino owner in Las Vegas. She died in 1971, and the resort was sold to a group of investors, who added an RV park for guests. The Hacienda was sold entirely to Paul Lowden, a part owner, in 1977. The Hacienda hosted several ice-skating shows starting in the 1970s, and would later host Lance Burton in a magic show that ran for five years. The Little Church of the West was relocated onto the Hacienda property in 1979, and 11-story hotel towers were added in 1980 and 1991, for a total of 1,137 rooms. Circus Circus Enterprises purchased the Hacienda in 1995, with plans to build a new resort in its place. The Hacienda closed on December 1, 1996, and the hotel was imploded at the end of the month as part of a televised New Year's Eve special. Circus Circus Enterprises opened the Mandalay Bay resort on the site in 1999, and the Hacienda name was licensed to another property, the Hacienda Hotel and Casino, near Boulder City, Nevada. The neon horse sign was preserved and put on display in downtown Las Vegas.
rdf:langString Hacienda – w przeszłości stanowił hotel i kasyno, który funkcjonował przy bulwarze Las Vegas Strip w latach 1956–1996. Był własnością Standard Motels, Inc., a zarazem czwartym obiektem należącej do korporacji sieci hoteli Hacienda. Pozostałe znajdowały się we Fresno, Bakersfield oraz Indio. Przed wejściem do hotelu widniał ogromny znak "Horse and Rider", który obecnie jest częścią ekspozycji w muzeum Neon Museum. Położony przy krańcowozachodniej części Las Vegas Strip, Hacienda był pierwszym hotelem, który widzieli goście przybywający do Las Vegas z Kalifornii. Obiekt znajdował się poza tym blisko McCarran International Airport i w okresie największej świetności prowadził własne linie lotnicze, Hacienda Airlines.
rdf:langString Hacienda
rdf:langString Land-based
xsd:date 1996-12-01
xsd:date 1956-10-17
rdf:langString June 1956
rdf:langString Charcoal Room
xsd:decimal 1965197519801991
xsd:integer 266
xsd:integer 538
xsd:integer 1137
rdf:langString
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 64575
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