19,831 fans – Cirque du Soleil

7,478 fans – Cleveland Clinic

7,043 fans - Wynn Las Vegas

6,825 fans – Harry Reid

6,816 fans – Town Square Las Vegas

4,520 fans – Encore Las Vegas

3,036 fans – Rory Reid

2,658 members – First Friday Las Vegas / Whirlygig, Inc.

2,136 fans – THE MISSION LAS VEGAS

2,077 fans – Fremont Street Experience

1,819 members – Burlesque Hall of Fame

1,658 fans – Beauty Bar Las Vegas

1,636 fans – Charlie Palmer

1,419 friends – Don’t Tell Mama

1,412 fans – City of Henderson

1,408 fans – Opportunity Village

1,369 friends – Nevada Ballet

1,339 fans – Paymon’s Mediterranean Cafe & Hookah Lounge

1,330 fans – College of Southern Nevada

1,300 fans – The Neon Museum

1,062 fans – Le Reve

951 fans – World Market Center Las Vegas

914 fans – Neon Reverb Music Festival

798 fans – Clark County, Nevada

788 fans - Golden Nugget Hotel & Casino

786 fans – Bombay Gin

723 members – Oscar Goodman – Happiest Mayor in the World

642 fans – Allure Las Vegas

593 group members – Arts Factory Las Vegas

586 fans – Downtown *Firefly*

518 fans – City of North Las Vegas, Nevada

480 fans – City of Las Vegas

468 members – Erotic Heritage Museum

411 fans – UNLV College of Fine Arts

392 members – KNPR

391 members – Steve Evans for City Council

376 members – Trifecta Gallery

350 friends – Councilman Steve Wolfson

341 group members – Brett Wesley Gallery

323 fans – Nevada State Museum

308 members – Downtown Cocktail Room

275 friends – Stavros Anthony

262 fans – Jim Gibbons

248 fans – UNLV Marjorie Barrick Museum

243 fans – Lied Discovery Children’s Museum

241 friends – Laura Henkel Fine Art

233 friends – Steve Ross

223 fans – UNLV School of Architecture

192 fans – Stratosphere Las Vegas

132 members – Hogs & Heifers Las Vegas

166 fans – Sidebar

142 members – Hispanic Museum of Nevada

107 fans – Mob Museum

Click the link below to check out the brief profile of David Mozes and THE MISSION LAS VEGAS in the September-October 2009 issue of KNPR’s Desert Companion magazine.

Desert Companion

News 88.9 KNPR

Today David Mozes, Managing Principal of THE MISSION LAS VEGAS, participated in a radio interview discussing Art Optimism in Las Vegas on KNPR’s State of Nevada with Dave Berns radio program.  Click the link above to hear the discussion, also including Marty Walsh from Trifecta Gallery and Jennifer Harrington of Henri & Odette Gallery.

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by Kristen Peterson, Las Vegas Sun

Downtown offers a lot, but people will still wonder, ‘What if …’

When word spread a few months ago that the Pinball Hall of Fame would be moving to a spot across the street from the Liberace Museum, the responses were similar:

“How perfect. Two American pop culture venues within a reasonable proximity of each other.”

“The Star Trek Experience should move over there.”

“Revive the Elvis museum, plop it down. Clustered together, we’d have synergy, a place where unique local attractions aren’t 20 strip malls apart.”

Why stop there?

Wouldn’t it be something if the city’s contemporary galleries, artist studios and boutique stores were clustered in one area? Add a coffee shop, a book store, maybe a restaurant and, wow, imagine the possibilities. All the elements are there. Just put them in one place and call it an arts district. The city could invest a little money and designate the area, create lamp post banners, invite business and gallery owners into the storefront spaces and work with them on permits.

There’s the Aerial Gallery that runs along Las Vegas Boulevard downtown. Why not move it to Charleston between Main Street and Las Vegas Boulevard?

That would say so much. People would realize that life is stirring within those seemingly dilapidated buildings, that something is going on. Marketing is everything, you know.

But would it work? Hard to say.

Vegas has an arts district, but it is shabby and fragmented. Within its 18 blocks, the district has a cluster of antique shops, a vintage furniture store (Retro Vegas) full of midcentury modern goodies culled mostly from Las Vegas homes, a Mexican restaurant, the Contemporary Arts Center, Trifecta Gallery, a yoga studio, low-rent artist studios and art and design businesses. Paymon’s Mediterranean Bistro opened this week in the Arts Factory, where Valentino’s Zootsuit Connection, which sells glamour vintage clothing, will relocate. Up the street from the Arts Factory is the Fremont Entertainment District, home to Beauty Bar, the Downtown Cocktail Room and the Don’t Tell Mama piano bar. Around the corner from there is Henri & Odette, a gallery and coffee shop, next to a neighborhood grocery store.

On paper, downtown Las Vegas is rich with culture. Galleries open and close, and that will continue. So will the conversations on how to build and keep momentum in the arts, and the battles with the city on permits and codes. There is the endless sputtering of “if only.”

“If only there were a bar in the arts district …”

“If only there were a coffee shop …”

“If only people would leave their homes and not just on the closing night of a gallery or to go to the downtown First Friday festival …”

Unfortunately we lost some great galleries and boutiques in the area. But Paymon’s and Valentino’s should draw some foot traffic.

How perfect.

If only the Onyx Theatre, home to alternative, original and absurdist plays and dance events, could move into the arts district, then things would take off — especially with the Samuel Beckett Festival happening each year in the Mission Building behind the Arts Factory.

If only people knew they could eat lunch on a Saturday at Paymon’s or Casa Don Juan, then walk across the street to Retro Vegas, then to Gypsy Caravan antiques, then walk up Colorado Avenue to the Arts Factory and look at exhibits at Trifecta Gallery and the Contemporary Arts Center. Wouldn’t that be great?

After that they could get in their cars (because that’s what we do best) and drive over to Henri & Odette for coffee or any one of the new local taverns for a drink.

How perfect.

Source: lasvegassun.com

ACE bus

by Mary Polidoro (polidorom@rtcsnv.com / 702.676.1622)

Construction continues to progress on Casino Center Boulevard from Ogden Avenue to Charleston Boulevard.

Casino Center Boulevard from Ogden Avenue to Clark Avenue will have southbound traffic lanes open for the duration of the project. Northbound and southbound traffic lanes are closed from Clark Avenue to Hoover Avenue. There is one northbound traffic lane open on Casino Center Boulevard between Hoover Avenue and Coolidge Avenue. Traffic lanes remain closed from Coolidge Avenue to Charleston Boulevard. All east-west intersections from Casino Center Boulevard to Charleston will be open with the exception of the intersection at Garces Avenue.

Third Street will have southbound traffic lanes open between Charleston Boulevard and Colorado Avenue. Traffic lanes on Third Street will be open in both directions between Colorado Avenue and Imperial Avenue.

The permanent asphalt patching on Paradise Road from Convention Center Drive to Sahara Avenue has been completed. Night patching will continue over the next few weeks from 8 p.m. to 5:30 a.m. on Paradise Road, north of Sahara Avenue.

Source: rtcsnv.com

ACE DT Connector June 2009

Three public bus models converge at the Downtown Transportation Center on May 25. At the left is a Citizens Area Transit bus, to the right is a Metropolitan Area Express (MAX) bus used between downtown and North Las Vegas and behind that, a pair of double-deck Deuce buses. When the Regional Transportation Commission begins its ACE bus routes along the Las Vegas Strip next year, vehicles similar to the MAX buses will be used.  Photo by ULF BUCHHOLZ.

Three public bus models converge at the Downtown Transportation Center on May 25. At the left is a Citizens Area Transit bus, to the right is a Metropolitan Area Express (MAX) bus used between downtown and North Las Vegas and behind that, a pair of double-deck Deuce buses. When the Regional Transportation Commission begins its ACE bus routes along the Las Vegas Strip next year, vehicles similar to the MAX buses will be used. Photo by ULF BUCHHOLZ.

By Richard N. Velotta, In Business reporter

Anyone who has watched tourists load and unload the popular double-decker Deuce buses on the Strip knows that there has to be a better way to move visitors up and down our fabulous neon byway.

The problem is that with the Citizens Area Transit system the fare normally is paid when you get on board. On the Deuce, there’s one door in the front (the entrance, where you pay the driver) and one toward the center or back (the exit). Because many of the Strip riders are tourists and pay by the ride — and there are dozens of riders at nearly every Strip bus stop — there is a big logjam to climb aboard.

On top of that, they are tourists so they ask questions like, “Where does this bus go?” Transit officials tried to alleviate some of the continuous questions to drivers by hiring some high school students to serve as “Deuce Ambassadors” to answer Las Vegas and bus system questions.

Because the route is up and down the Strip, by far the most popular route in the system, the long lines never seem to discourage ridership. It’s part of the Vegas experience.

Anyone who has been on the Strip during a busy weekend knows that mass transportation is one of the answers to clearing some of the congestion. It’s a nearly hopeless cause to suggest that more Strip employees use the buses to alleviate some of the traffic.

Yes, there has to be a better way. And by January, we’ll get it. That’s when the Deuce’s new Strip cousin, the ACE, will make its debut.

Many already have seen what the ACE buses look like. They’re running along Las Vegas Boulevard North from downtown Las Vegas toward Nellis Air Force Base.

The Regional Transportation Commission calls the ACE system “the showcase transportation initiative for the Las Vegas Valley.” The bullet-shaped vehicles look like — and will function like — light-rail trains. As much as possible, they will travel in dedicated lanes.

I’ve ridden two of the West’s newest mass-transit systems and can attest to the convenience of using light rail in Denver and Phoenix. But unfortunately, light rail is far too expensive for us now. ACE is the logical middle step between traditional bus service and light rail.

So what will set ACE apart from the Deuce?

The biggest difference will be in the paying for a ticket. Instead of buying a pass on the bus, tickets will be available at stations. Bus loading will be similar to light-rail train loading with doors opening widely to allow passengers to get on and off quickly. Station platforms will be built so that passengers won’t have to go up or down steps to get aboard.

In addition, the ACE line — the Strip and downtown route will be known as the “Gold Line” — will have fewer stops than the Deuce, potentially making every trip faster.

The Gold Line will have 16 stations with six in the downtown area in dedicated lanes. The northern end of the route will be at Bonneville Avenue and Grand Central Parkway near the Las Vegas Premium Outlets.

From there, the bus will go north to the World Market Center and to Symphony Park before turning east toward Casino Center and the Fremont Street Experience. Then, it will head south to Garces and Coolidge avenues (the downtown arts district). From that point, it leaves the dedicated lanes for surface streets and continues south via Third Street to Main Street.

The next stop is the Stratosphere, where the bus will cut over to Paradise Road and stop at the Sahara, right below the southern terminus of the Las Vegas Monorail. At Convention Center Drive, it will stop near the Las Vegas Convention Center and cut west to the Strip.

Once on Las Vegas Boulevard, the bus will stop at the Fashion Show mall and Wynn Las Vegas; CityCenter, Bellagio and Paris Las Vegas; Excalibur and the MGM Grand; Mandalay Bay; Town Center and the Callaway Golf Center; and finally, the Las Vegas Outlet Center on the southbound run only.

From there, it curls back to the north, using Warm Springs Road and Gilespie Street, where the southern end of the route is the South Strip Transfer Terminal.

Jacob Snow, RTC general manager, is enthusiastic about the ACE’s arrival and last week shared that and his views of other Southern Nevada transportation developments at a breakfast meeting of the local chapter of National Association of Industrial and Office Properties, the Commercial Retail Development Association.

Snow said about 33,000 riders use the Deuce on the Strip every day. With both systems, the commission is expecting 45,000 to 50,000 Strip riders, especially with the prospect of more employee commuters.

Like the Deuce, ACE tickets will cost $3 a ride, $7 for an all-day pass and $15 for a three-day pass.

ACE routes are planned to Henderson and to northwest Las Vegas. The Boulder Highway “Green Line” is expected to be running by late 2010 or early 2011. Snow said to the northwest, the “ACExpress” would run along U.S. 95 from Durango Drive and use the high-occupancy-vehicle diamond lanes and the express lanes under construction on Interstate 15.

On other transportation matters, Snow told the breakfast attendees why the state and federal highway trust funds are in trouble (they’re funded by gasoline taxes and motorists are paying less for fuel as well as driving less in recessionary times resulting in less revenue) and on how stimulus funds are going to be spent in Southern Nevada (mostly on roadway repairs, the new downtown transit terminal and some new Park-and-Ride lots).

“We’ll have more groundbreakings coming up than we’ve ever had in the past,” he said.

Snow also made a case for toll roads, but admitted that unless there was a major change in direction as the legislative session comes to a close that it would be one more issue that would be put off until at least 2011.

One proposed road that needs immediate attention and would benefit from tolling would be a bypass of Boulder City. Snow warned that when the O’Callaghan-Tillman Bridge at Hoover Dam is completed, the bottleneck would only move to Boulder City unless something is done.

Snow also gave his 2 cents worth on the proposed DesertXPress high-speed train proposal that would link Las Vegas with Victorville, Calif. Snow acknowledged that while Victorville and not somewhere farther south into the Los Angeles Basin as the southern terminus could be the train’s “Achilles heel,” he feels a connection to Palmdale to the west to link with California’s high-speed train network would make DesertXPress viable.

“And right now,” he said, “we’re supportive of anything that will improve mobility into the (resort) corridor.”

Source: lasvegassun.com

By Steve Green

Job openings aren’t plentiful in Las Vegas and the city certainly isn’t known for having a high volunteerism rate. Yet Las Vegas made the top 12 in a Relocation.com list of the “Best Cities for a Fresh Start.”

The top nine are Austin, Dallas-Fort Worth, Charlotte, Denver, Columbus, Indianapolis, Washington-Baltimore, Atlanta, and Oklahoma City.

Las Vegas is tied at No. 10 with Houston and Seattle.

Besides jobs and the volunteerism rate, another criteria is affordable housing — and Las Vegas seems to be getting more affordable by the day.

“With the unemployment rate climbing as the national economy sags, more people are searching for communities that offer greater economic opportunity and a better standard of living,” Relocation.com said this week.

The company said it took a wide-ranging look at factors that would appeal to someone looking for a fresh start.

The factors include city “popularity” based on consumer requests for moving quotes to move to that city; economic-growth prospects; home affordability and the strength of a community as reflected by volunteerism rates.

Relocation.com said it looked at communities with more than 1 million people.

“Although many midsized cities are flourishing, they tend to be tied to a single industry or a government agency, while larger cities generally have more diverse economic bases,” the company said.

Source: lasvegassun.com

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