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[Read the accompanying piece: Glass
Pool Inn: Honorary A+]
[View pictures of Jamie on the Big
Brother page]
September 15, 2002 * Oct. 20, 2002 * Oct. 16,
2005
Vegas' Coolest Pools
In this city that sizzles, all hotels are not
created equal when it comes to water worlds.
Two pool aficionados rate some of the best and worst on and
off the Strip.
By Steve Friess
LAS VEGAS -- Aside from the Regis Philbin slots,
underdressed cocktail waitresses and overpriced room service,
there's one thing that every hotel on or near the Las Vegas
Strip has in common: a pool. Or, in the parlance of the resort
business, a "water feature."
But not all water features are created equal in Las Vegas. Some
are inventive expanses with sandy beaches, waterfalls and bubbly
hot tubs. Others are mundane, obligatory water-filled holes
in the ground that reflect little of the kitschfor which Las
Vegas is famous.
Despite the reams of type produced about a city that greets
more than 30 million tourists annually, I've never read a comprehensive
examination of the most important part of the daytime experience
when visiting this city of 110-degree afternoons.
We decided it was time somebody compared them, and we were just
the people for the job.
What you find here are the opinions of a 29-year-old pool aficionado
and six-year resident of Vegas and my 12-year-old "little
brother" Jamie Koch, whom I mentor through the Big Brothers
Big Sisters of America program. It wasn't hard to hook Jamie
on the project: He's so addicted to water features that his
eyes sparkle when he sees a fountain at the mall.
Our one-month study, completed in August, spanned 20 pools on
and near the Strip. We applied a set of criteria that included
the tangible and intangible. Did this water feature display
any innovations? Did it fit the hotel's theme? Was it any deeper
than the typical 3 to 4 feet of most Strip pools? Did it meet
the expectations of a new resort? Was it clean? Was the layout
logical or clever? What were the lifeguards' attitudes? Did
they look bored? Was the pool "swimmable"--meaning,
did it invite us to jump in, and was the water temperate?
Almost all the pools topped out at 4 feet and not one had a
diving board, presumably an insurance liability issue. (One
lifeguard at Luxor confided that his most frequent reason for
diving in was to rescue drunken guests.)
The resorts' pools are not typically open to locals or non-guests.
In many cases, as at the ultra-exclusive Venetian, Bellagio,
Four Seasons and Mandalay Bay resorts, we went with friends
who were guests and who invited us. Other times we just walked
in. In theory, at the pool's towel desk, guests are expected
to show the staff a room key as proof that they belong, but
in some cases we passed by with a smile and a nod.
Only two hotels--the Mirage and the Hard Rock--were so strict
that there was no way to visit them, so we omitted them from
our survey. Although we couldn't even glimpse the Mirage's pool
from the entrance, we did get an eyeful of the sensational sandy
beach-like spread at the Hard Rock (which issues wristbands
to guests for entrance) and guessed it would have ranked high
in our study.
We omitted other hotels on the Strip on mere whim, including
Bally's because it always struck us as a dull hotel, and Circus
Circus because the pool is tiny, crowded and not worth the ink.
Of course, there were thrills with the unexpected: The Flamingo,
which bests all its new, billion-dollar neighbors with slides,
waterfalls and live animals. The otherwise dull Tropicana, which
overachieves with a swim-up blackjack bar. And Caesars Palace's
topless Venus pool, which obviously offers its own specialist
appeal.
Flamingo:
A+
The scene: Who knew one of the oldest and least
elaborate casino-resorts on the Strip would have a backyard
so big, so lush and so much fun? The network of water slides
would have been enough, but there is also a second pool with
a pounding 14-foot waterfall and a third, more conventional
and sedate pool for those seeking a calmer atmosphere. Even
that last one is clever, with 10-foot-tall concrete pink flamingos
elegantly and quietly spitting water out of their beaks. Live
flamingos and African penguins are on display in the garden,
a one-minute walk from the water area. Easy access for locals
too, because there's no one checking IDs.
Jamie says: "We'll be back. Awesome."
Swimmability: 10. Is a flamingo pink? Dive
in.
Price of a Coke: $2.50
Price of a rum and Coke: $4.50
Mandalay
Bay: A+
The scene: As we treaded water in the 7-foot-deep
pool waiting for the waves to start and sweep us to the sandy
beach, we wondered: Why didn't anybody think of this before
the Mandalay opened in 1999? There are also a lazy river, two
more conventional pools and one that had only adults in it.
Lifeguards seem happy, vigilant and alert, a rarity anywhere
on the Strip. Wet 'n' wild it's not, but for a resort trying
to live up to its South Pacific theme, this place makes a heck
of a splash.
Jamie says: "Just three more waves, OK?
Please?"
Swimmability: 10. You can't enjoy a good tsunami
without getting very wet.
Price of a Coke: $2.50
Price of a rum and Coke: $5.25
Palms:
A
The scene: Here's a new hotel that understands
the importance of a top-class water feature. Mostly the Palms
triumphs by offering the most intriguing and diverse options
for how to sit and relax. There are double-size bed-like lounge
chairs, hammocks, tables and seats built into the shallow end
of the pool, purple mattresses on a sandy beach and taupe canvas
canopies. Even the normal lounge chairs have better vinyl cushioning
than those at most other hotels.
They pay homage to that Vegas classic, the Glass Pool Inn, with
a 3 1/2-foot-deep above-ground glass pool with windows in the
side for taking funny pictures of friends underwater. The aim
is clearly to attract a young, happening crowd, in part by calling
the pool part of the hotel the Skin Pool, with a bikini top
as a logo. You can even rent backgammon sets for $10 a day or
shoot a round of pool on the deck.
Jamie says: "Very cool. Add a waterfall
somewhere and this would be an A+."
Swimmability: 10. But lounging in a hammock
has its appeal.
Price of a Coke: $2
Price of a rum and Coke: $6
Bellagio:
A-
The scene: Elegance is the calling card of
the MGM Mirage's most upscale destination, and the pool area
does not disappoint. Several pools flank a lovely central walkway
of ivy-covered arches, and each pool is surrounded by tall,
well-groomed pines and bonsais. Three of the pools have mushroom-like
fountains in the center for guests to sit under, proving that
you can be classy and fun at the same time.
An extra perk: Free water aerobics classes at noon for guests.
Our most significant concern, though, was that the water had
a strangely unpleasant salty taste found at only one or two
other pools in our survey.
Jamie says: "Pretty, but the hot tubs
aren't very warm or bubbly."
Swimmability: 7. Nice to cool off, but not
much more to do in the water than that.
Price of a Coke: $3
Price of a rum and Coke: $6.50
MGM
Grand: A-
The scene: The city's largest hotel had to
have a big water feature if only to accommodate its capacity
of 10,000 guests. It does so with four pools sporting clever
show-biz names like Talent Pool, and it goes the extra mile
with a lengthy, lazy river that takes almost 10 minutes to float
around. It was, however, oppressively crowded and noisy.
Jamie says: "The lazy river just goes
on and on. This rocks."
Swimmability: 8.5. There's a long rectangular
pool with lanes for folks who want a no-gimmicks place to do
laps.
Price of a Coke: $3
Price of a rum and Coke: $4.50
Four
Seasons: B+
The scene: The first thing we saw were pool
attendants spraying cans of mist on women in lounge chairs as
they relaxed around an earthworm-shaped pool. This hangout for
the ultra-rich won't appeal to children, but it's not supposed
to. It's intended to be a relaxing respite for wealthy travelers,
and it does that especially well, considering that it borders
Mandalay Bay's frenetic beach. Somehow, despite this, there's
little noise.
Jamie says: "Boring, but the water was
nice."
Swimmability: 5. This place is for luxuriating.
Price of a Coke: $3.75
Price of a rum and Coke: $7
Rio:
B+
The scene: A very clever and elaborate effort.
Four pools span a huge area, each with distinctive features.
One is shaped like a clam and has a large concrete shell in
the middle with a giant pearl at its center that spews water.
Another is shaped like a fish and has orange and black tiling
on its floor. The third has a Jacuzzi tucked behind a waterfall,
a clever touch. The fourth has a sandy beach that leads to a
deeper, sandless area, accented by a striking waterfall. The
beach was an interesting try, but because the Rio uses coarse
sand, it's uncomfortable to walk on and makes the pool dirty.
The deep end is deeper, at 5 feet, than the Strip standard.
One cool feature was the blackjack table under a canopy in the
center.
Jamie says: "They need softer sand in
the beach-pool thing, but that hot tub behind the waterfall
was pretty cool."
Swimmability: 9. Deciding which part to swim
in is the problem.
Price of a Coke: $2.50
Price of a rum and Coke: $5.25
Treasure
Island: B+
The scene: This small, compact, lively pool
area had one feature that pushed its grade higher, a slide.
Its pitch is only about 10 degrees, but it is also the only
hotel, aside from the Flamingo, to have one. The lifeguards
were a bit bossy, but this was a welcome change from the disengaged
ones at the other pools. The faux wood-plank look of the deck
fit the hotel's pirate-ship theme.
Jamie says: "Go on the slide headfirst
for best effect."
Swimmability: 10. Too frenetic to do anything
else, least of all relax.
Price of a Coke: $2.50
Price of a rum and Coke: $5
Tropicana:
B+
The scene: A terrific surprise from one of
the oldest and least-noticed resorts located at a prominent
corner, the Strip and Tropicana Boulevard. The Tropicana has
a large pool with curves and caverns, which is topped off by
a fountain cascading dramatically from 15 feet above. There's
a bar in the pool with swim-up blackjack tables. The landscaping
is great too, with many palms and other trees that fit the jungle
theme. The downside of that, though, is lots of tree bits in
the water, especially in the unappealing hot tub. A plus: The
pool is 5 feet deep.
Jamie says: "That waterfall is the best!"
Swimmability: 10. All the action's in the pool,
from socializing to gambling.
Price of a Coke: $2.50
Price of a rum and Coke: $4.50
Caesars
Palace: B
The scene: Lifeguards at the Luxor and MGM
Grand said Caesars' was their favorite pool on the Strip. But
once we saw it, we could only figure they liked the prospect
of glimpsing topless women. This is the only Strip hotel we
found that allows what they call "European-style topless
sunbathing" at the appropriately named Venus pool. Fortunately,
that area is blocked from children's view. The central pool,
with a soaring rotunda in its center and fountains shooting
water 15 feet high, is a sight to behold and frolic beneath.
And there's something to be said for the elegance of the marble
designs in the pool floor. Still, that's all there was. The
water was uncomfortably cold, and the deck is made of some material
that gets so hot that walking barefoot is almost dangerous.
Jamie says: "It's nice, but not really
that great."
Swimmability: 6. It was really chilly.
Price of a Coke: $2.25
Price of a rum and Coke: $5.50
Luxor:
B-
The scene: It has a cool layout of four pools
at the base of the pyramid, one of which has 20-foot Egyptian
pillars topped by busts of goats that spit water from their
mouths. The other three pools surround a central structure that
should have been a waterfall that spills out into each. But
the waterfall is in disrepair, and instead swimmers look at
a puzzling dry ramp of cracked blue tiles. Lifeguards looked
bitterly bored: One dozed, and another wasn't even wearing a
swimsuit. Fix the decrepit fountain and the lifeguards' attitudes
and the hotel could easily earn a B+ for variety and excellent
use of its theme.
Jamie says: "Is that bird poop on the
broken waterfall?"
Swimmability: 6. The pool with the pillars
was fun, but visions of avian feces at the other ones were a
turnoff.
Price of a Coke: $2
Price of a rum and Coke: $4.25
Paris:
B-
The scene: This underwhelming and ordinary
spread on a third-floor deck is nevertheless fun because of
the scenery. A leg of the Eiffel Tower juts into the side of
the plaza, and visitors can walk beneath it after a dunk in
the star-shaped pool to grab a bite from the snack bar.
Another touch befitting the theme was the quaint open-air Parisian
cafe on the plaza.
Jamie says: "Cool scenery, cold water."
Swimmability: 5. They had to try hard to be
this frigid in 110-degree weather.
Price of a Coke: $2.50
Price of a rum and Coke: $4.25
Wynn
Las Vegas: B-
The city's newest, and most expensive, resort
has received early complaints about the pool, but we thought
it wasn't that bad. It's a long narrow stretch of water that
starts out quiet on one end and goes all bombastic on the other
with swim-up blackjack and loud music. It's harder to relax
here than it should be for such an elegant hotel, and the area
for children is small.
Jamie says: ''How many billions
did they spend on this?"
Swimmable: 6.
Price of a Coke: $4.50
Price of a rum and Coke: $7.
Orleans:
C+
The scene: This ordinary pool hardly reflects
the resort's theme, but it has a spacious tranquillity and a
cute baby pool. Mostly, it's average. We gave Orleans an extra
half-grade for its terrific hot tub, which is circular, with
a big palm tree in the center, with fountains and strong jets.
Capriciously, we awarded another half-grade for the sound system's
Paul Simon music.
Jamie says: "For another half-grade, play
some Eminem."
Swimmability: 7. The rare Vegas pool where
you can swim laps, and it's never crowded.
Price of a Coke: $2.50
Price of a rum and Coke: $3
Excalibur:
C
The scene: For a resort that prides itself
on being kid-friendly, it's peculiar that the only interesting
water feature--a small waterfall--is accompanied by a do-not-touch
sign. The mushroom-shaped pool is surrounded by some theme-appropriate
and cute castle façades on the terrace. The water was too
cold.
Jamie says: "Why can't we touch the waterfall?"
Swimmability: 5. A take-it-or-leave-it place.
Price of a Coke: $2.25
Price of a rum and Coke: $3.75
Harrah's
Las Vegas: C
The scene: This rectangular pool on a second-floor
deck is average. With the building's motel-like façade
towering over it and no view of the Strip, you could just as
well be at a Days Inn in Boise, Idaho. One oddity was that the
walls and floor of the pool are made of metal: Bounce on the
floor and you'll feel vibrations. Two nice features included
a chair massage for a reasonable $20 for 15 minutes, and misters
that effectively distributed cool puffs of moisture on nearby
loungers.
Jamie says: "I liked the paintings of
the parrots, but why are they there?"
Swimmability: 7. Decent for swimming laps because
it's rectangular.
Price of a Coke: $2.50
Price of a rum and Coke: $5
Stratosphere:
C
The scene: As with everything else at this
hotel, the view's the thing. In this case, it's not much: From
the eighth-floor deck you look at the smog-shrouded mountains
to the west or the Sahara's neon billboard to the south. Oddly,
to the east is a mural of a beach and sky that's out of place
and cheesy. The pool is adequate, although it had the worst-tasting
water. The basketball nets and blue-and-white balls in the pool
were a cool feature, unless you're the guy sitting behind the
nets who has to kick missed shots back into the water every
few minutes.
In its water feature the Stratosphere fails to take advantage
of its status as the tallest structure west of the Mississippi.
Jamie says: "Pool basketball is a fun
idea."
Swimmability: 4. Something's not right with
that water.
Price of a Coke: $2.29
Price of a rum and Coke: $3
Monte
Carlo: D+
The scene: Much like its cousin at New York
New York, this pool is small and ugly, although it does shake
mildly as a wave pool and there's a short, lazy river too. This
was the only Strip pool we saw that allowed non-guests in for
a fee--a laughable $15 per person. The Monte Carlo tried to
enhance its pool's allure by calling it the Monte Carlo Beach
Club, but it's still merely a hole with water in it.
Jamie says: "Can we go now?"
Swimmability: 4. Yawn.
Price of a Pepsi: $2.75
Price of a rum and Pepsi: $5.50
Aladdin:
D
The scene: You know you're in trouble when
you get off the elevator on the sixth floor and walk out to
the pool area only to have your sidekick ask, "Where's
the pool?" The dominant element here is a concrete plain
with lounge chairs and tables and two small, unremarkable pools
on raised landings. I could put a lounge chair on my driveway
for the same effect. The zigzag-shaped pools are poorly conceived
as well, with room for only one row of chairs crammed next to
one another. Annoyed guests stood around as if waiting for someone
to vacate a parking space.
We expect more from a new hotel. The water feature here was
clearly an afterthought.
Jamie says: "This is stupid."
Swimmability: 2. Too crowded. Miserable.
Price of a Coke: $2
Price of a rum and Coke: $5
New
York New York: D
The scene: Whoever decided to place this skimpy
pool directly below the peak of the roller coaster deserves
to be fired. Imagine spending $150 a night to sit poolside and
listen to the thunderous racket of the cars rising to their
crescendo followed by the charming screams of riders as they
plummet--every 2 1/2 minutes. The view, too, is miserable: the
parking garage and a sign for Interstate 15. An occasionally
erected volleyball net in the middle would have been a nice
touch if it didn't inconveniently split the pool in two. Also,
because of too much chlorine in the pool, it was uncomfortable
to open our eyes underwater.
The only thing that saved this place from an F was the fact
that the Venetian was so disappointing that it deserved to be
alone in that distinction.
Jamie says: "Boring, but the hot tub was
hot and bubbly."
Swimmability: 2. Not worth going blind for--maybe
they should put a little water in the chlorine.
Price of a Coke: $2.25
Price of a rum and Coke: $4.75
Venetian:
F
The scene: You would think that a resort based
on a city of canals would offer a second-to-none water feature.
You would be so, so wrong. Our venom for this particular pool
arises from the shock that this $1.5-billion casino, which in
so many other ways is sensational--elaborate paintings, enormous
and elegant suites and innovative gondola rides--would offer
a pool area that's not only unimpressive but also downright
hideous.
Finding the two pools is a game of wandering through a confusing
maze of planters and walkways. Once you do make it through,
you find two ordinary pools in a big, shadeless expanse. There's
no view to speak of, except of the mustard walls, and even there
is evidence of neglect: Black streaks are emerging on the paint.
Remember, this is one of the newest properties on the Strip,
and its pool area is a great big failure.
Jamie says: "Do we have to actually go
in the water to rate this one?"
Swimmability: 2. Not much else to do. The good
news is that if you stay here, you probably don't know what
you're missing at the other hotels anyway.
Price of a Coke: $2.50
Price of a rum and Coke: $6.50
Steve Friess is a Las Vegas-based freelance writer.
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