The Neon Boneyard: A Quirky Trip into Vegas’ Past
There’s more to Las Vegas than gambling, eating and shopping. And partying.
There are shows. (Chippendales is still around.) There are music festivals. (Whatever.) There’s the Hoover Dam. (Not quite in Vegas, but a short drive or chopper ride nevertheless.)
There’s golf. (Which I’ll get to someday once I’ve graduated past the driving range and putting course.) There’s people watching. (More like pointing at people and then laughing at them.) There’s the Bellagio fountain show. (If you don’t mind crowds.) There’s even the Mob Museum (which I’ll blog about in the coming weeks.)
And then there’s the Neon Museum (a.k.a. The Boneyard), where signs from a bygone Vegas era go to die retire or await restoration. Located just North of, uh, “colorful” downtown LV, the ginormous shell-shaped former lobby of the old La Concha Motel (concha is Spanish for shell) serving as the museum’s entrance beckons the visitor to take a trip back to a time when mobsters ran Vegas and people came to Vegas for divorces and cards.
For those of you too young to remember a time before iPads: before there were plasma screens, there was LED. Before there was LED, there was neon (and argon and helium and a host of other elements) that lit up this part of the desert. Bright, glowing invitations to a world unlike anywhere else, neon was slowly phased out for newer, cheaper, more efficient technology.
These signs, along with the establishments that gave way to bigger, flashier, modern iterations of themselves, became unwanted or obsolete. But thanks to the Neon Museum, opened in 1996, these old remnants of a Vegas few people remember anymore have a chance to be restored or at least preserved.
I’d been wanting to visit the Boneyard for years but couldn’t tear myself away from blackjack make the timing work (after all, many of my Vegas trips are last-minute unfortunate decisions.) I finally had the foresight to do some planning and schedule a visit – the park is only open on specific days (you’ll have to check their calendar for availability) – and then I bought two tickets: one to visit at night, another for the daytime.
I recommend doing both, however. While the night tour is the best setting to see the neon (duh), not all signs are in working order. Coming back during the day allows you to see things that you will miss in the dark, but definitely take up their offer of borrowing a free umbrella and say yes to the chilled bottle of water. (Despite coming for the earliest tour that day, it was still burning hot.)
So, now, this has become my favorite place in Vegas. Because I have a special place in my heart for old, unwanted things.
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