Business

Sahara offers last goodbyes after nearly 60 years

  • Courtesy Las Vegas News Bureau

    The Sahara is shown in August 1954. The Strip property will close Monday; owners said keeping it open is no longer economically viable.

  • Courtesy Las Vegas News Bureau

    The Sahara seen in July 1966. Over the years, a cascade of stars performed at the property, including Johnny Carson, Don Rickles, Tina Turner, Dean Martin, Pat Boone, Sonny Bono and Connie Francis.

  • Jeff Schied/Las Vegas Review-Journal File Photo

    Pedestrians wait for the light to change across the street from the Sahara in March 2001. Los Angeles-based SBE Entertainment and private equity firm Stockbridge Real Estate Funds of San Francisco bought the hotel-casino for between $300 million and $400 million in 2007. » Buy this photo

  • Gary Thompson/Las Vegas Review-Journal

    Front, from left, Sahara workers Maureen Lumino, Greg Lindsey, Dieter Dechant, Kurt Sedlmeir and Sean Morland pose Wednesday in the hotel-casino. All said they will miss working at the Strip property, which will close Monday after nearly six decades of business. » Buy this photo

  • Courtesy Las Vegas News Bureau

    An aerial look at the Sahara in April 1991. Plans in the last few years to upgrade the hotel-casino, perhaps by removing existing hotel towers, were shelved when the economy sank.

By Howard Stutz
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Posted: May 14, 2011 | 8:52 p.m.
Updated: May 15, 2011 | 1:10 p.m.

In it's day, the Sahara was Las Vegas' epicenter.

Peter Villalobos would know.

For almost 35 years, he manned the Strip hotel's front desk.

He watched the parade of celebrities and the pseudocelebrities.

He supervised thousands of hotel check-ins for high rollers and want-to-be high rollers.

Villalobos will be at his front desk terminal Monday when the Sahara's final guest checks out at around noon. The nearly 60-year-old Strip resort will cease operations two hours later, a victim of both the recession and of progress.

Sahara owners SBE Entertainment of Los Angeles and private equity firm Stockbridge Real Estate of San Francisco acquired the hotel-casino in 2007 from the family of the late casino pioneer William Bennett. The new owners had hopes of breathing new life into the resort. They have not announced plans for the 18-acre corner of the Strip and Sahara Avenue.

In March, SBE said it was "no longer economically viable" to operate the Sahara.

GOING OUT WITH DIGNITY

Last week, Arash Azarbarzin, president of SBE's hotel division, who has overseen the Sahara since the company took control, said the goal was to close the Strip resort "quietly and with dignity."

His thoughts have been with employees like Villalobos, who remained loyal to the property, even as the city's two-decade building boom added megaresorts that dwarfed the aged, 1,720-room Sahara.

Villalobos gave Azarbarzin a firm handshake last week and thanked him for the four years that SBE kept the property operating. The year SBE took over, the company spent about $2 million to refurbish and make cosmetic changes to the Sahara's public areas. SBE never operated the casino; that was done by Navegante Group.

Like other longtime Sahara employees, Villalobos could have gone to a job with a newer hotel-casino. For personal or professional reasons, he and others chose to remain, hoping that the Sahara would one day return to what it once was.

"It was the Wynn. It was Caesars. It was Aria. The Sahara is where you saw the stars," Villalobos said. "It was a wonderful property and it still is. I hope it still has a future."

Rebecca Salter has similar hopes.

She went to work at the Sahara when she was 22 years old, as a waitress in the hotel's coffee shop. Almost 42 years later, Salter served her final meal in the Caravan Cafe, which closed last year.

Leaving for a job at another casino was never a consideration.

"This was home. This was my family," said Salter, who started her career at the hotel when it was owned by real estate developer Del Webb. "I would get up in the morning and be excited to go to work. There are just so many wonderful memories about working here."

Salter made one final trip to the Sahara on Tuesday, primarily to seek out "Mr. Arash," who was just 4 years old when she began her career at the Sahara. Like Villalobos, she thanked him for efforts to keep the Sahara going.

Over the past decade, the casino attracted midlevel gamblers, and in its final months was touting the Strip's only $1 blackjack tables. The Sahara also promoted the NASCAR Cafe, with its gut-busting, 6-pound burrito once featured by the Travel Channel's "Man v. Food."

Even employees who didn't have the tenure of Villalobos or Salter were saddened by the closure.

Sean Morland, a NASCAR Cafe cook, said the Sahara is shutting down 16 days shy of his one-year employment anniversary. He has already lined up a new job as a cook at the Stratosphere.

Morland said his mother and grandmother used to visit the Sahara.

"It was always their favorite place to stay and it had so much history," said Morland, who plans to work the NASCAR Cafe's final shift Monday. "I'm disappointed because I'm a NASCAR fan but also I got to work with a lot of nice people. I think we'll get a lot of customers in this weekend."

HAMMERED BY RECESSION

Azarbarzin said the company's evolving plans for the Sahara, which once included removing one or two of the existing hotel towers, were shelved when the economy sank.

Once the decision to close the Sahara was finalized, efforts were made to help the property's 1,050 workers find employment. Job fairs were held and casinos came looking for workers.

The company didn't stand in the way if workers could be hired elsewhere. Some areas closed early. The Sahara's roller coaster stopped rolling in April when the attraction's certified ride engineers found new jobs.

The Stratosphere hired two dozen Sahara employees, including about 50 percent of the staff of the Sahara's poker room. For the Stratosphere, the new employees were seen as two-for-the-price-of-one. The resort picked up seasoned employees and perhaps a longtime Sahara customer base.

Sahara poker room manager Richard Luksza, who helped bring his team of dealers and supervisors to the Stratosphere, said the casino has added four poker tables due to increased business.

"Because the poker room had so many tenured employees and a good local customer following, we're trying to connect and bring them to the Stratosphere," said Dieter Dechant, who spent almost seven years as a Sahara poker dealer.

Maureen Lumino, a nine-year poker dealer at the Sahara, began using social media to tell customers that the poker staff, and the Sahara's popular poker tournament, were heading to the Stratosphere.

"We were hopeful things were going to turn around and SBE was going to start remodeling the Sahara," Lumino said, "but we weren't real surprised by the news (of the closing)."

Luksza had also hoped SBE would give the Sahara a new lease on life.

But then Boyd Gaming Corp. halted construction of Echelon in 2008, plans went away for a project on the neighboring former Wet 'n Wild site and the Fontainebleau was shuttered in 2009.

He knew the end would come.

"It wasn't the news you wanted to hear, but the economy put the casino in the wrong direction," Luksza said.

ONE LAST GOODBYE

Soon after the closing was announced, room bookings increased for the hotel-casino's final weekend. Two hotel towers closed over the past year, but Sahara officials expect most of the property's 800 remaining rooms to be filled.

"We did hear from a lot of longtime customers," said Shawn Woodrich, the Sahara's reservations director. "The Sahara built a loyal following over the years and they are sad to see the property closing."

Woodrich spent 27 years at the Sahara, and like many longtime workers, would often bump into celebrities. Literally. She once walked head-on into entertainer Jerry Lewis coming around a blind corner. Lewis hosted his annual Muscular Dystrophy Telethon at the Sahara for decades.

Local publicist Mike Henle worked at the Sahara between 1970 and 1974 as a busboy, in the warehouse and on the bell desk. He once escorted then-Sahara owner Del Webb to his room on the hotel's top floor, carrying the businessman's luggage and earning a $2 tip.

As a valet runner, he once earned a tip of 35 cents and an autograph from comedian Jack Benny, even though Benny's wife wasn't happy with the hotel's laundry service.

Working at the Sahara, Henle met comedian Buddy Hackett, singer and U.S. Rep. Sonny Bono and Pro Football Hall of Famer Paul Hornung.

"We made good money there and it was definitely the place to be," Henle said.

The House of Lords, the Sahara's 50-year-old steakhouse, will have one last dinner seating tonight. Assistant Executive Chef Kurt Sedlmeir, who spent five years at the Sahara and recently joined the Stratosphere, said the House of Lords was a restaurant where the chef and staff knew the regular customers and celebrities and prepared meals that weren't always on the menu.

"House of Lords had a great tradition that's going to be missed," Sedlmeir said.

Souvenir hunters were not able to purchase $1 Sahara casino chips last week at the casino's cashiers cage because the tokens were expected to be needed by gamblers during a busy final weekend. However, a run on Sahara casino chips for mementos was expected before closing time Monday.

Azarbarzin said the Sahara's gaming equipment, hotel furniture and other property would be auctioned this summer.

Sahara employees will have first crack at buying the items, including the large photos now surrounding the casino of entertainers who performed in the Congo Showroom, such as Johnny Carson, Don Rickles, Tina Turner, Dean Martin, Pat Boone and Connie Francis.

But while they might take a piece of place with them, most know they can never replace the Sahara's atmosphere.

"The place made you feel very comfortable and that's hard to come by," Luksza said.

Contact reporter Howard Stutz at hstutz@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3871. Follow @howardstutz on Twitter.

Comments

Registration Notice: The Review-Journal has implemented a new registration procedure that requires all existing and new accounts to validate and login using Facebook. Visit the Registration FAQ for more information.
Terms & Conditions

The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The Review-Journal does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please use the Report Abuse button.

Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 24 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.

Note: Comments made by reporters and editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal are presented with a yellow background.

  1. VegasDude2010 May 16, 2011 | 3:36 p.m. Report Abuse

    "Restoring" the Sahara isn't an option "American" - it's a tear down project, plain and simple. Nice corner piece of land but wrong time. It will take several years for a replacement project to get underway.

  2. yessicaflores79 May 15, 2011 | 7:29 p.m. Report Abuse

    It's sad to see the Sahara close down...
    I filmed a video inside her (at April 28)..
    I miss her already
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C0DozXy0eyI

  3. American values May 15, 2011 | 4:45 p.m. Report Abuse

    @vegasdud Let see, Trump is successful, has had two successful TV programs, was just offered $60 million to continue one for one more year, is a Billionaire with a proven track record, has purchased and turned facilities around most of his career... and VegasDud has done what besides call people names and demean a successful billionaire - now there is something to LOL about...
    Trump certainly IS one that could restore the Sahara.

  4. VegasDude2010 May 15, 2011 | 4:03 p.m. Report Abuse

    @Harold: Donald Trump? Really? LOL He did such a great job with his tower. Wow. Why do you fools mention Donald Trump when it comes to projects? His success rate is horrible. 1 out 10 projects he invests in makes money. With his track rate with casinos in New Jersey, he'd never get a license in Nevada, never.

  5. HAROLD.HUMPHRIES May 15, 2011 | 2:50 p.m. Report Abuse

    POORLY MANAGED THE LAST 15 YEARS, NEVER COMPLETELY UPDATED. THE SAHARA HAS THE BEST LOCATION ON THE LAS VEGAS STRIP, SAHARA BLVD AND LAS VEGAS BLVD!! WHAT A OPPORITUNITY FOR A "NEW" UPDATED, STATE OF THE ART SAHARA HOTEL AND CASINO!! I HOPE DONALD TRUMP BUYS THIS LOCATION OUT. GOD BLESS ALL THE EMPLOYEE THAT WERE VERY LOYAL TO THE END!!

  6. justice May 15, 2011 | 1:20 p.m. Report Abuse

    YesIam, did a famous backside sit on the seat?....I would be interested.....

  7. VegasDude2010 May 15, 2011 | 12:33 p.m. Report Abuse

    Yes, the Sahara had its day. However, anyone that has ever stepped foot in the place in the last 10 years knows that the owners let it go to pot. It was old, dirty, the casino floor was sparse, no energy, etc. $1 blackjack? Yea, they had ONE table with 1$ blackjack, and you can guess the riff raff playing at that table. I really think that even if the economy didn't go bad, this place was doomed.

  8. kjhowe May 15, 2011 | 10:59 a.m. Report Abuse

    The last of the great Del Webb owned properties, which included the The Mint, Thunderbird, and Sahara in Las Vegas, the Sahara-Tahoe, Sahara-Reno, Nevada Club in Laughlin; Mountain Shadows in Scottsdale, The Newporter in Newport Beach, The Town House in Phoenix and Fresno; the Kuiilima Hotel, now Turtle Bay in Hawaii and others in the Far East. Del Webb Hotel Division executives and staff memebers were highly respected in the industry and many work in hotels throughout the world. The Sahara was the flagship and set the standard in "the day". The memories will linger.

  9. YesIam May 15, 2011 | 10:07 a.m. Report Abuse

    Justice, I'll sell you a used toilet.

  10. justice May 15, 2011 | 8:16 a.m. Report Abuse

    How sad another "ICON" of history is going the way of a pile of rubble. I would love a piece of the Sahara, If one of the former employees have clout to get the "guest book" of famous signatures,I would be interested in buying it....please email me at sui_generis628@yahoo.com Thank You! Cat

Thursday, May 24, 2012
Clear Clear, 78° Weather Forecast