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Question of the Day - 06 December 2021

Q:

In your Question of the Day about what's left of old Vegas downtown, one of the commenters mentioned the Hotel Apache. I'd never heard of that. What and where is it? 

A:

The original Hotel Apache opened in downtown Las Vegas in 1932, only a year after wide-open casino gambling was legalized in Nevada. 

It was built by P.O. Silvagni, an Italian immigrant who, though he spoke little English, was a builder in Utah, held one of the concrete contracts for Hoover Dam, and bought the vacant lot at 128 Fremont Street for $30,000, envisioning a place where dam workers could blow off steam and money on Saturday nights. It was the first Las Vegas hotel to have air-conditioning in the lobby, protected by a newfangled "air curtain" at the entrance. It was also the first with an electric elevator and a carpeted casino.

The building was eventually leased to Benny Binion, who ran the rooms above the Horseshoe Casino for friends and players.

Binion’s was purchased by TLC Casino Enterprises, which also owns the Four Queens, in 2004 and the rooms were closed in 2008 due to the economic downturn. The building itself, however, is still owned by the Silvagni family, which has collected rent for decades.

Eighty of the original rooms reopened on July 29.

Code restrictions prevented moving walls to increase the size of the rooms, so they were refurbished and decorated to look like they did in the ’30s: hardwood floors, stained-glass windows, historic photos, antique furnishings, including old phones and radios, and queen beds only, though with the mod cons, such as flat-screen TVs and upgraded bathrooms.   

Binion's has touted the Apache as downtown's "Historic Haunted Hotel," where unexplained and unexplainable phenomena — spirits apparently doing odd stuff like slamming doors, shuffling papers, turning on TVs, showing up in photos, making muffled thumps, even having contact with staff members, especially in the old count room on the second floor and room 400 — take place on a reportedly regular basis; the hotel rooms were featured on the Travel Channel show “Ghost Adventures” in March 2019.

Currently, rooms at the boutique hotel-within-a-hotel are going for $48-$74 on weekdays and $129-$149 weekends.  

 

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Comments

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  • spaxman Dec-06-2021
    Not to mention:
    Hotel Apache and 4 queens are the only downtown casinos without a resort fee.

  • Dave_Miller_DJTB Dec-06-2021
    “The building itself, however, is still owned by the Silvagni family…”
    Still? Like, even today?
    
    We all know the recent history of the casino, that Caesars (or was it Harrah’s at the time?) bought the Horseshoe, moved the WSOP to the Rio and then sold the casino (but kept the Horseshoe brand name).
    
    But was the hotel not part of that transaction?
    
    Of course, since it was their intention to steal those brands and flip the business, maybe it’s not so surprising that the hotel was not part of the deal. 

  • jay Dec-06-2021
    Room Rates
    How are the room rates ? are they charging a premium for a historic room ?
    

  • VegasVic Dec-06-2021
    Room Rates
    @Jay, the last line of the article: "Currently, rooms at the boutique hotel-within-a-hotel are going for $48-$74 on weekdays and $129-$149 weekends."

  • rokgpsman Dec-06-2021
    Binion's Hotel Apache
    https://www.lasvegasadvisor.com/resort-fee-hotels/
    
    There isn't a listing for Binion's/Hotel Apache or for Candlewood Suites on the LVA resort fee page (link above), but they are mentioned in the writeup above the list. (Four Queens and other "No Resort Fee" hotels are listed in the chart). Could be an oversight?

  • Roy Furukawa Dec-06-2021
    Ahhh, the Air Curtain
    I remember when I was a kid I was so delighted by the air curtains at the wide openings of all the Fremont St. casinos. Summer heat outside, but just a step towards the aluminum grids where the doors were folded away marking the entrance, and then you felt the cool rush of air coming from above to step inside to feel the cool air conditioned casino floor. I was sure I stepped into Heaven... until I reached the age to actually gamble in the casino. :D