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Question of the Day - 10 October 2025

Q:

I remember when Fremont Street was closed to vehicle traffic. There was a big brouhaha over it, but eventually it settled down and nowadays no one even thinks twice about it being a pedestrian promenade. Do you think the same thing could ever happen on the Strip? 

A:

Anything's possible, but we'd say the chances are slim to none. And Slim's up at Tahoe, playing poker (an old gambler's joke). 

The Strip is four miles long and has 85,000 hotel rooms. Thus, any public-transportation system would have to be able to move tens upon tens of thousands of people along the famous boulevard at any given time. And we dare say that the Las Vegas Loop, even when/if it's fully built out with 70 miles of tunnels and 100 stations, won't even come close to that. 

Another obstacle would be visitors' attachment to cruising the Strip in their cars –- even if it's more of a crawl than a cruise at the best of times. It's a time-honored ritual, even more so since Fremont Street was closed to cars and the Strip was designated a scenic highway. Politicians would have to buck a lot of public sentiment to ban cars from the Strip.

However, proposals have been floated over the years.

For example, a subsurface light-rail system along the Strip was among the recommendations from a study commissioned by the Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada, two years in the making. While the cost was estimated to run anywhere from $2.1 billion to $12.5 billion (it would be much cheaper if built at grade), a $1 billion light-rail system in Phoenix generated $7 billion in economic impact, rather than the anticipated $3 billion. But it's a long-term project that could take up to 20 years to accomplish...

... Or more, if arterials are included. Above-ground lines to Reid International would presumably branch off from the main Strip system. Light rail or streetcars were envisioned running along Flamingo Road and Charleston Boulevard, facilitating traffic to the Strip. Also proposed was a streetcar line connecting downtown to Reid along Maryland Parkway.

Then there's the question of which, if any, vehicles would have access to the Strip. Taxis? Uber/Lyft/Zoox? Presumably, cabbies and rideshare drivers would be supportive of anything that reduced non-commercial auto traffic on the Strip, enabling them to get from fare to fare faster. Likewise mobile billboards.

Buses? Prior to CAT bus service beginning operations in 1992, Las Vegas mass transit was provided by a private company, Las Vegas Transit. The Strip was their only profitable route and supported the bus system for the whole valley. It would be hard to ban buses from the Strip, even with a light-rail system in place, while having to support citywide public buses. 

When one of the key pioneers of the Las Vegas Monorail, Robert Broadbent, proposed installing it on Las Vegas Boulevard, he came up against staunch opposition from the casinos, torpedoed by resort power brokers who viewed the system as a means to leave their properties instead of get to them. They also believed that the large concrete guideways would be a distraction to sightlines in front of their beautiful buildings.

All in all, we don't see a rail system on the Strip or private automobiles being banned in our lifetime.

 

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Comments

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  • sunny78 Oct-10-2025
    agree, not happening
    Fremont St downtown where the cluster of casinos are and shut down to traffic is a fairly small compact area. The strip goes on for much longer and the major casinos are much more spread out. Imagine all those staying at strip motels and those visiting the strip trying to get on/off a light rail? No thanks. And America is car culture. This ain't Europe. Thankfully.   

  • David Miller Oct-10-2025
    Could ever happen?
     No.

  • Jeff B. Oct-10-2025
    Make a small portion pedestrian only
    I always thought a section of strip, say from Harmon Ave to Spring Mountain Road, would be a great pedestrian-only area. Except for The LINQ Promenade, it's basically back-to-back casinos. There would be significant costs to the resorts that only have a vehicular entrance on the strip, but where I see the crosswalks the most packed. 

  • Username Oct-10-2025
    ACCEL Moving Sidewalk
    The width of The Strip makes it ideal for some version of an ACCEL-type moving sidewalk heading in both directions. You'd have multiple moving lanes, laid out side-by-side, each with its hand-rail. The lane closest to the curb would be moving at maybe half the rate of a conventional airport moving sidewalk so as to make getting on and off accessible and unintimidating for elderly or disabled people. And if they like this speed those folks can just stay in that slow lane for their whole trip up The Strip. But, at regular intervals, there would be openings allowing passengers to move sideways and trade up into a faster lane -- the jump to a faster speed being barely noticeable because you are already moving and each increase is incremental. There could be two or three increasingly faster lanes and lots of moving-up opportunities, so that those in a hurry could keep side-stepping lanes until they end up in the fastest lane, one perhaps going 20 MPH! There, I solved traffic on The Strip!