What is the defining shape of Las Vegas’ skyline? Is it boxy or curvy? Slim or thick? Rectangular, triangular or (recently) spherical? Owing to our city’s relative youth and enormous cultural footprint, it’s all these things, thanks to the ambitious developers and marquee-name architects who, over the years, have one-upped each other in creating buildings that Las Vegas—and America, and the world—have never seen before. Some are enormous monoliths intended to humble us, while others are warm, pedestrian-scale buildings meant to reassure us—and we kinda love them all. Here are a few of the Weekly ’s favorite Valley buildings, captured in all their glory.

1972: Flora Dungan Humanities Building at UNLV



UNLV’s Flora Dungan Humanities building—named for the Nevada assemblywoman, activist and general boss—has buttress-like columns at her foundation, making the seven-story building appear as though she’s on stilts. Look up when stepping inside, and you’ll see a strong use of negative space—a hollow center contained by concrete pillars and stacked balconies. She’s a brutalist beauty with midcentury modern flair.

1996: Observation Tower at The Strat



The 1,149-foot observation tower formerly known as the Stratosphere was designed by Ned Baldwin, who was the supervising architect on Toronto’s 1,185-foot CN Tower, and willed into being by Bob Stupak, easily one of the most unique figures in Vegas history. Stupak wanted an Eiffel Tower or Space Needle for Las Vegas, and while it falls a bit short of that lofty ambition, it is as unique as the man who built it, with its swooping pillars and jewel-shaped observation pod topped with thrill rides.

2023: Sphere



Many different architectural styles have impacted and influenced the look of the Strip, but the ground-breaking Madison Square Garden Company entertainment venue Sphere can’t be categorized; there is no building like it anywhere in the world, at least until recently announced plans lead to a second Sphere in Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates. Kansas City firm Populous was behind the overall design of the world’s largest spherical object at 366 feet tall and 516 feet wide, –Brock Radke creating a striking departure—and that’s truly saying something—from the towering buildings along Las Vegas Boulevard. As soon as that vast, mind-boggling LED exoskeleton switched on, a new conversation about physical spectacle began, and the exploration of those ideas is just getting started.

2010: Veer Towers



2009: The Shops at Crystals



2010: Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health



When Larry Ruvo enlisted Pritzker Prize-winning architect Frank Gehry to design the Cleveland Clinic Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health, he ensured that the medical research facility would have a memorable form. The gleaming, curvilinear Ruvo appears like a faraway city glimpsed through a heat mirage—melting, folding in on itself. It’s also one of the most distinctive buildings Gehry has conceived—and considering that Gehry also designed Bilbao’s Guggenheim Museum and LA’s Walt Disney Concert Hall, that’s no small thing.

1992: Luxor



A palatial relic of Las Vegas’ themed attraction past, the Luxor stands as a postmodern, pyramidic marvel, ominous in size and baffling to observe once the sun strikes its capstone. The pyramid, constructed out of reinforced concrete and dark reflective glass panes, holds a 30-story atrium within, showcasing the impossible scale of this steeply built replica of ancient Egypt’s Great Wonder of the World.

1963: Guardian Angel Cathedral



2012: The Smith Center for the Performing Arts



The decades-long development to create a true home for arts and culture in Las Vegas couldn’t yield something simple or generic—or a building that didn’t represent the Valley. David M. Schwarz Architects, which had completed the Schermerhorn Symphony Center in Nashville and the American Airlines Center in Dallas, found inspiration in Hoover Dam, adding exquisite details to the Art Deco theme while building the first performing arts center of this size to obtain a LEED Gold rating. The Smith Center was built to look timeless and last forever, perhaps antithetical to the very idea of Las Vegas.

1930: Academic Building at Las Vegas Academy of the Arts



Our Valley doesn’t have many buildings listed on the National Register of Historic Places—about three dozen all told. (By comparison, LA boasts nearly 300.) That fact alone makes this Art Deco charmer, designed by Reno firm George A. Ferris & Son, an absolute standout in a city of disposable artifice and a perfect inclusion for the National Register. The Academic Building’s elegant façade, with its Aztec-inspired elements and graceful filigree, does the rest.

1944: Huntridge Theater



Built at the height of World War II while materials were scarce, the Huntridge Theater doesn’t have a lot of fancy flourishes. Today, its Streamline Moderne tower sign, with its marquee base and strip of neon lettering at the top, is really the only thing identifying it as a classic movie house. But when you dig into the work of its architect, S. Charles Lee—designer of LA’s Max Factor Salon, Fox Wilshire Theater and Los Angeles Theater, among others—its Tinseltown charms begin to emerge. Nearly all its sibling structures are on the National Register of Historic Places for good reason.

Click HERE to subscribe for free to the Weekly Fix, the digital edition of Las Vegas Weekly! Stay up to date with the latest on Las Vegas concerts, shows, restaurants, bars and more, sent directly to your inbox!

CONTINUE READING
RELATED ARTICLES