Hidden Vegas: Aladdin’s Desert Passage Shops


Sammasseur looks skyward for the latest in our Hidden Vegas series…

Finding remnants from the bygone days of Vegas is always a treat. We’ve been scouring the mezzanines, peering under tarps and poking our cameras through keyholes to add to our Hidden Vegas series. In the previous installment, I even flew overhead to photograph massive construction projects that are hidden from the average tourist’s point of view.

Last night I looked to the skies once more…from the inside of Miracle Mile Shops of Planet Hollywood. And there I found remains of the formerly Arabian-themed Desert Passage Shops.

Desert Passage

I started coming to Las Vegas in 2005, and had only been through the Aladdin Resort once or twice. At that time, the Planet Hollywood restaurant chain was in deep trouble, with closures taking place around the country.

Desert Passage

The announcement that Aladdin would be re-branded as Planet Hollywood Hotel Casino seemed very foolhardy. Sure, the movement to de-theme Strip resorts was in full swing, and Middle-eastern-flavored places like Aladdin and Sahara had fallen out of fashion in a post-9/11 world. But Planet Hollywood??? That decision seemed as out-of-touch as renaming it after dying restaurant chains like Chi-Chi’s or Kenny Roger’s Roasters.

Shows how much I knew, as Planet Hollywood Hotel is now a hip, popular middle-tier destination, with stars like Jennifer Lopez and Lionel Ritchie on the marquee. Of course their biggest draw is Britney Spears, so there’s still plenty of dried-up cheese on the Planet Hollywood menu.

Desert Passage

The existing hotel is the second Aladdin to be built on this part of the Strip. The original opened in 1966 and was imploded in 1998. A new Aladdin was rebuilt from the ground up and opened its doors in 2000. Seven years later it officially became Planet Hollywood Resort.

Desert Passage

The Arabian motif was gradually stripped from both the hotel and adjoining Desert Passage Shops, which received a new frontage and glossy modern exterior. Inside, the corridors got a top-to-bottom makeover. Most of the ceiling was painted into a matte-gray finish, discouraging shoppers from gazing upward at the former faux skies.

However, not everything was taken away. There are two distinct areas within the mall where the original decor survives. One surrounds the V Theater complex and fountain show.

Desert Passage

Desert Passage

Desert Passage

The other is nestled under the indoor rainstorm.

Desert Passage

Desert Passage

Desert Passage

Desert Passage

Perhaps it’s telling that the domes, citadels and faux village structures that comprise the Desert Passage remnants exist where other attractions demand your attention…and offer a convenient distraction. You’ll find be hard-pressed to find any mention of them on the glitzy, contemporary Miracle Mile website.

Desert Passage

The Arabian architecture of Desert Passage is clearly…and hilariously…out-of-sync with the rest of the Mile.

Desert Passage

Until very recently, the south-facing exterior of the mall along Harmon Avenue still carried the Aladdin facade. The removal of Krave nightclub and opening of Buffalo Wild Wings and another Nacho Daddy finally jump-started the finishing of that section.

Hidden Vegas

Desert Passage

It’s uncertain if the remaining Arabic interior will eventually get stripped out and de-themed. But for the time being, it’s another chapter in our book of Vegas curiosities.

Do you have a suggestion for our next “Hidden Vegas” piece? Perhaps you’ve seen something around town that looks out of place or shows evidence of a secret past. If so, hit us up in the comments below.

[Images: Sammasseur with additional stills from Miracle Mile Shops via Facebook, wishuwerehere.com and Greg C.]

5 thoughts on “Hidden Vegas: Aladdin’s Desert Passage Shops

  1. Great article. Not just in content, but for my walk down memory lane. My first trip to Vegas was in 2002 and me and my friend stayed at the Aladdin. I loved it. The casino had the huge magic lamp in the middle with a cocktail lounge up the stairs next to it and they also had the “London Club” which was the high roller area that was upstairs. (No clue why it was called the London Club in a middle eastern themed resort?) I don’t get to the back of the Miracle Mile often these days, but I do like that they have kept the cheesy indoor rain storm and a little bit of the theme. The buffet is stilled called the Spice Market Buffet perhaps as a nod to yesteryear.
    Good memories of my first stay in Vegas.

  2. Are you familiar with Winston Churchills snooker table on display at Main St. Station? tucked away upstairs.

    1. Hi, Darrin – we actually did a full piece on Main St’s curiosities during our VegasChatter days. The oddities above the casino, the Berlin wall remnants in the men’s room and the antique slot machines near the north entrance. You can pick up a printed map at the reservation desk that shows the location and description of their collection at the reservation desk. Great of you to mention it once more!

  3. Nice all around. I miss the theming of Vegas generally, but especially of cocktail waitresses…. The (new 2000s) Aladdin had these great I-dream-of-Jeannie type cocktail outfits, with flowing semi-seethrough pants and cropped tops…

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