LAS VEGAS
This $2.3-billion gamble looks to be a winner so far with large rooms, excellent service and decent rates.
Steve Wynn's Encore hotel opens in Las Vegas
21 things to do in Las Vegas for under $21
Is this the worst moment ever to open a fancy new casino?
You're entitled to wonder that, given that Steve Wynn's 2,034-room, $2.3-billion Encore took its first bets Monday in the middle of a national financial nervous breakdown.
But here's a question more suited to the time and place: What's in it for me?
The answer at Encore is plenty. With its big rooms, top-notch service, Asian influences and playful design (I'll tell you later about the radioactive red licorice chandeliers), Encore is a casino-resort that was designed to grab up the wealthiest, most sophisticated visitors in town and charge them top dollar.
IF YOU GO
To book it: Rates at Encore start as low as $159 for certain days in January. For information: (702) 770-7000, www.encorelasvegas.com.
In the face of the recession, however, Wynn and company have slashed nightly rates to as low as $159.
I'm trying to think of a $159 hotel room in
And because I landed on the east side of the alleged 52nd floor (that, too, I can explain later), I had a drop-dead view of snow-dappled mountains, the pulsating lights of the Strip below and only the forlorn former site of the Frontier (where most recent projects have stalled) to remind me of the money trouble that stalks Las Vegas and the rest of the country.
In the public rooms below, you see a lot of red (including those radioactive gaming-area chandeliers), and a lot of quasi-paisley butterflies, a many-colored motif by designer Roger P. Thomas that subtly connects with the flower motif next door at the Wynn.
You also see an unusually large amount of the outside world. In an advance on tactics Wynn used at the Wynn, the Encore has a lot of big windows, neighbored by thick greenery, that allow filtered natural light to wash into places that old-school casino folk won't expect.
XS, the Victor Drai nightclub that will open on
The opening was a study in optimism. With temperatures outside dipping into the 40s, hundreds of visitors and locals nevertheless lined up in the cold on a Monday night to await admission. Inside, the jewelry shop played blazing lights on the prune-sized Wynn Diamond, a 231-carat marvel that is billed as "the largest cut pear-shaped diamond in the world."
At the gaming tables, Wynn schmoozed the invited high-rollers -- and gave them a few million dollars to open the betting with -- then set it all in motion by taking the microphone to declare "Let the games begin!"
Cue
This resort is such a sidekick to the Wynn next door, with shared resources and connecting arcade, that some may be tempted to see Encore as a hotel-expansion masquerading as a new property. Whatever. More of a good thing is better.
The Wynn, where rates have lately fallen as low as $149, is bigger all around: Apart from its own golf course (the only one on the Strip), it has 2,716 rooms (which average 640 square feet), 111,000 feet of casino space, 22 food outlets and 47,000 square feet of retail, including Ferrari and Maserati dealerships.
Encore, a bronzed skyscraper like its older sibling, has 2,034 rooms, 72,000 feet of casino space and 27,000 square feet of retail space (the Esplanade) -- its 11 boutiques stretched along an indoor walkway that connects it to the Wynn. Maybe you've seen the TV ad with Steve Wynn perched on top.
But just how high is he? As with many skyscrapers, the elevator buttons are designed without a 13th floor. And here, there are no floors numbered in the 40s, either, because four is considered bad luck in Chinese culture. (It sounds like the Mandarin word for death. Since opening a casino in Macao two years ago, Wynn's people have brought back several Asian touches.)
So did I lose at the slots because my 52nd-floor room, once you do the math, was really on the 41st?
Even without white tigers, dancing waters or a volcano or a pirate ship -- features that Wynn's previous projects have included -- the more restrained Encore took 2 1/2 years and an estimated $2.3 billion to build. It has five restaurants, seven bars, a nightclub, 11 retail outlets and a big spa done up in soothing celadon hues.
In all, the resort is expected to add 5,300 jobs to the local economy, including one for singer-comedian-impressionist Danny Gans. Beginning Feb. 10, Gans will perform Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays in the theater (tickets, $95 to $120).
But for now, I'd say the stars are the ones working the floor, serving the food and cleaning the rooms. From the first to the last hours of my stay, it was clear the staff had been rigorously drilled in customer service.
The traffic-control guys remember to say "good evening." The cocktail waitresses know the minimum room size. The waiter at Botero can discuss the headliner-artist's work in detail. The guy sweeping the floor jumps to catch a closing elevator door for a guest. Most of the security guys keep their cool, even when being berated by guys like the T-shirt-sporting opening-night customer whom I overheard bellowing, "Don't treat me like a bleeping 2-year-old. If I want to be treated like a 2-year-old, I'll go to Circus Circus!"
(Well, there was one security guy who wasn't so cool. Apparently mistaking me for a paparazzo, he ordered me out of the hotel six minutes after its official opening. I think maybe he was kidding. Those guys are great kidders.)
But basically, this was a resort near the top of its game. Even if this was first-night best-behavior, it was impressive. I can't see how it pencils out for Mr. Wynn at the current rates, but I'll take it.
The restaurant lineup includes Sinatra, a 152-seat dinner-only steakhouse by Theo Schoenegger (formerly of Patina in
For dinner there, I had a tremendous little prosciutto-and-salty-persimmon starter, followed by an osso buco ($44) that wasn't quite as tender as I expected, given that it's cooked at low heat for 36 hours.
Where am I?Should we take offense, order a drink, or what? That depends, of course, on where you think these words turned up. |
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