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Film transparency showing the Last Frontier, Las Vegas, circa 1940s

Date
1942 to 1949
Description
An image of an interior view of the Pioneer lobby in the Hotel Last Frontier. A large poster of Will Rogers hangs on the wall.

Image

Florine McCuistion Papers

Identifier
MS-00174
Abstract

The Florine McCuistion Papers (1944-1973) contain drafts of her newspaper column on interior design, certificates and recognitions, a small amount of information about her husband Ted McCuistion, newspaper clippings, and photographs.

Archival Collection

Transcript of interview with Lee Cagley by Claytee D. White and Stefani Evans, August 08, 2016

Date
2016-08-08
Description

Lee Cagely, an interior designer and professor who designed some of the most iconic hotels in Las Vegas, Nevada, was born in the Panama Canal Zone on January 31, 1951. His father Leo was a civil engineer for the Panama Canal Company and his mother Charlotte worked as a receptionist. After his father left his job in Panama, Lee spent his childhood in Dallas, Texas; Tulsa, Oklahoma; and Des Moines, Iowa. He started to attend Rice University for architecture, but he chose to leave before completing his degree. He returned to college a few years later and graduated from Iowa State University with a degree in interior design in 1975. While his first California jobs were in restaurant design, he quickly moved on to airports and hotels and moved to Las Vegas in 1990 after associating with Marnell Architecture. Cagley is known for his designs in the Rio All-Suite Hotel and Casino, Ceasars Palace Atlantic City, the Mirage, and the Bellagio Resort & Casino. He is currently Chair of the Iowa State University College of Design and is principal designer for Lee Cagely Design. Here, Cagley explains the importance of keeping the various pieces of the infrastructure of a resort—including landscape architecture, architecture, interior design, all kinds of HVAC [heating, ventilation and air conditioning] concerns, housekeeping, food service, maintenance, etc.-invisible in order to maximize the visitor experience. At the same time he illustrates through several examples how resort design does not happen in a vacuum-it is instead part of a complex team that works together to create the whole. He also describes the challenges the Las Vegas resort industry finds in creating the very best visitor experience for a broad range of groups-from Millennials to their Boomer grandparents and all the generations in between.

Text

interior elevations

renderings made in projection on a plane surface of the finished appearance of the interior walls of structures

Material Type

interior perspectives

architectural drawings that render structural interior space and give the impression of relative position, size, or distance, as the space would appear if viewed from a physical vantage point

Material Type

Letter about the 1922 Moapa River Agency report

Date
1922-08-31
Description

Letter from the Department of the Interior United States Indian Field Service Chief Medical Supervisor informing the Commissioner of Indian Affairs the 1922 Moapa River Agency report was forwarded.

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