[Read the accompanying piece: Vegas'
Coolest Pools.]
[View pictures of Jamie on the Big
Brother page]
September 15, 2002 and Oct. 20, 2002
Glass Pool Inn
Honorary A+
By Steve Friess
LAS VEGAS -- Five decades ago, the Las Vegas Strip
was nothing but a dusty desert highway from Los Angeles to what
is now the downtown cluster of casinos. Back then, tourists
would drive without air-conditioning from California and know
they were almost in Vegas when they spotted the Glass Pool Inn,
standing alone and beckoning the road to give it her tired,
her hungry and her sweat-drenched masses.
The Glass Pool, which turns 50 this year, was the original
Las Vegas "water feature": a stunning 9-foot-deep above-ground
tank with huge round windows to peer through and take funny
photos of friends. As the city grew up around it, the pool remained
a constant relic of the old days and a frequent draw for filmmakers
parading scantily clad women around a vintage Vegas image. It
was originally named the Mirage, which this kidney-shaped, 54,000-gallon
tub must have appeared to be to those road-weary visitors. But
Vegas entrepreneur Steve Wynn bought the name from then-owner
Allen Rosoff in 1988 to use for his new hotel and company.
Today it's endangered. Rosoff sold it in 2000 to New World,
a partnership of Las Vegas land developers that has purchased
77 acres east of the Mandalay Bay resort for a new hotel. Earlier
press reports said the Glass Pool would be preserved within
the new hotel. The New World did not return calls for comment.
For now, though, it remains in its iconic location. Most guests
are foreigners sensible enough to realize that they can spend
just $45 a night to stay on the Strip. Non-guests can swim there
by paying $5 per person.
The pool once had a diving board and a slide, but they have
been removed. Although the water is clear and refreshing, the
edges are so grimy that a popular pastime is scratching one's
name in the black residue. The restaurant closed and is now
a sign shop. And the deck has just a few plastic lounge chairs.
Doesn't sound like an A+? Ah, but all this fits the Glass
Pool Inn's theme as surely as the Coney Island roller coaster
that loops around New York New York. That theme? Classic Vegas.
In a town where nothing lasts and where everybody's trying to
transport guests to some phony European scene, this one's authentic
in its own strange way.
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