I have lived in Las Vegas from 1975 to 1994. for the last 21 plus years I have travel back to visit with family and friends. Please let show you another side of accessible Las Vegas other than gambling all night long.
Please contact Dannewsdisability to help you planed an accessible trip to Las Vegas.
Las Vegas a small town that grew from the 80's to 2015 a major city in the desert with a population over 2 million.
Las Vegas has two major casino areas.
One area is the downtown which is the older section of town, in where you use to be able to drive down Fremont street, now it is closed and have it covered with a nightly show.
The second area is the strip. It also has lots of casino spread out in the valley known as local casino.
Red Rock Canyon is BLM land sitting in the North end of valley. It has a great visitor center with some facts about the the history of the area.
Floyd Lamb State Park is located in the western portion of the Valley. It tells the story of the orginal setttlers in the park. Nice area full of different acitivies to do for both accessible and non-accessible.
Valley of Fire is about 1 hour north heading towards Arizona/Utah on I15. It is Nevada first state park. There many outdoor activities from hiking, biking, photography, and birdwatching. It accessiblity is available is some parts of the park.
Just South of Vegas in a man-made lake know as Lake Mead. This man-made lake is a US National Park Serivce park unit.
At one end of Lake Mead is Hoover Dam one of the largest public work projects in the country at its time. Also this what started Las Vegas moore of a town in the desert. The accessiblity in the area is very limited and the tours are not accessible due to stairs inside the dam.