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Las Vegas Festival Grounds

The Las Vegas Festival Grounds is an open-air venue on the Las Vegas Strip in Winchester, Nevada. It is owned and operated by Phil Ruffin. The venue is located at the north end of the Strip, north of Circus Circus Las Vegas. It is 26 acres (11 ha) and has a capacity of 85,000 people.[2]

Former names

MGM Resorts Festival Grounds (2015)

311 West Sahara Avenue

85,000

26 acres (11 ha)

September 2014

May 9, 2015 (2015-05-09)

$20 million

Martin-Harris Construction[1]

History[edit]

From 1941 to the 1970s, the El Rancho Vegas occupied most of the land. In 2007, MGM Mirage (later MGM Resorts International) purchased the 26-acre (11 ha) El Rancho site from Gordon Gaming for $444 million.[3]


In 2014, MGM announced plans to develop the site as an outdoor music venue in partnership with Cirque du Soleil and Ron Burkle's Yucaipa Companies.[4] The project was primarily designed to serve as the site of Rock in Rio USA, a new biennial music festival. The venue was initially referred to as the City of Rock, named after its equivalent in Rio de Janeiro, the site of the original Brazilian version of the Rock in Rio festival. The name was soon changed to the MGM Resorts Festival Grounds.[5] MGM hoped to position the grounds as a site for festivals, concerts, and sporting events (such as boxing, mixed martial arts, and soccer) as a complement to its other venues in the area.[6][7]


The festival grounds made its debut in May 2015 with the Rock in Rio USA festival.[8] Development costs for the site totaled $20 million.[8]


In October 2015, the MGM Resorts branding was dropped and the site was renamed to simply Las Vegas Festival Grounds. The renaming was part of an effort to downplay MGM's role in the venue to improve its marketability for third-party events and to brand the site as being part of Las Vegas's "community".[9]


MGM sold the property to Phil Ruffin, along with the neighboring Circus Circus hotel and casino, in 2019.[10][11]