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Fremont Hotel and Casino additions and alterations: architectural drawings, image 100

Date
1967-12-01
Description
Electrical sheet for the Fremont Hotel and Casino from flat file 001c of the Martin Stern Architectural Records. This sheet contains first floor plan depicting existing conditions and electrical work to be performed.

Fremont Hotel and Casino additions and alterations: architectural drawings, image 101

Date
1967-12-01
Description
Electrical sheet for the Fremont Hotel and Casino from flat file 001c of the Martin Stern Architectural Records. This sheet contains a partial mezzanine floor plan depicting existing conditions and electrical work to be performed.

Fremont Hotel and Casino additions and alterations: architectural drawings, image 102

Date
1967-12-01
Description
Electrical sheet for the Fremont Hotel and Casino from flat file 001c of the Martin Stern Architectural Records. This sheet contains a partial mezzanine floor plan depicting existing conditions and electrical work to be performed.

Fremont Hotel and Casino additions and alterations: architectural drawings, image 103

Date
1967-12-01
Description
Electrical sheet for the Fremont Hotel and Casino from flat file 001c of the Martin Stern Architectural Records. This sheet contains specifications for electrical installations.

Fremont Hotel and Casino additions and alterations: architectural drawings, image 104

Date
1967-12-01
Description
Electrical sheet for the Fremont Hotel and Casino from flat file 001c of the Martin Stern Architectural Records. This sheet contains specifications for electrical installations.

Miscellaneous blue-line prints: architectural drawing

Date
1957-02-01
Description
From the Martin Stern Architectural Records (MS-00382) -- The Mint Hotel and Casino: Las Vegas -- Project drawings -- flat file 285d. This sheet contains the front elevation and signage dimensions of the casino building.

Image

Aladdin Hotel and Casino, 2545 slot machine installation floor plan layout: architectural drawing

Date
2000-01-24
Description
From the UNLV University Libraries Collection of Architecture Drawings (MS-00923) -- Unattributed drawings -- flat file 8. This sheet contains a computer drafted print of the Aladdin's main floor, bar area, and club room slot machine floor plan layout.

Image

National Automobile Dealers Association at the Sands Hotel: photographs

Date
1965
Description

Series XVI. Conventions

Sands Hotel and Casino

Mixed Content

Transcript of interview with Thomas J. Schoeman by Stefani Evans and Claytee D. White, July 18, 2016

Date
2016-07-18
Description
Architect Thomas J. Schoeman was born in 1949 in Brooklyn, New York, and was the first of his four siblings to graduate high school and attend college. Schoeman attended Nassau Community College and then transferred to the University of New Mexico in the early 1970s, from which he graduated in 1974. After spending his first five years out of college working as an architect in New Mexico, Schoeman received a job offer from Jack Miller and Associates (later, JMA Studio) and moved to Las Vegas, Nevada, in 1979. He stayed with JMA for many years, eventually becoming partner, president, and Chief Executive Officer. While at JMA, Schoeman designed, among many other iconic Las Vegas buildings, the original UNLV Dickinson Library, the Nevada Power building, One Queensridge Place, and World Market Center as well as expansions to McCarran International Airport and the Las Vegas Convention Center. Before he retired at age 62, Schoeman negotiated the sale of JMA to Baker International, an engineering and architectural firm, for which he worked for a short time as architectural director of. He also arranged for Baker International to agree to donate many early JMA records to Special Collections at UNLV Libraries. In his retirement he designs multifamily dwellings and other buildings that will help create community and revitalize Downtown Las Vegas.

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Transcript of interview with Jonathan Sparer by Stefani Evans and Claytee White, August 29, 2016

Date
2016-08-29
Description

Jonathan “Jon” Sparer of Las Vegas, Nevada, is a retired architect who is active in the local Jewish and LGBTQ communities. He grew up on Long Island, New York, in the hamlet of Woodmere, where his father was an importer. After graduating in Architecture from Ohio State University in 1977 Jon moved to Los Angeles, California, where he worked first with architect Jack Chernoff, then with architect Bob Barnett until 1981, when he accompanied his future wife and college classmate who worked for Martin Stern to Las Vegas. Stern sent her to open a field office to supervise the reconstruction of the MGM Grand after it burned in November 1980. Once in Las Vegas, Jon began working for architect Homer Rissman on Steve Wynn’s future project, The Mirage. Although Jon switched firms, he continued working on The Mirage and other Wynn projects with Marnell Corrao, where he would stay until 2001. Ironically, Jon’s original supervisor at Marnell Corrao was his future husband, architect John R. Klai II; Klai’s subordinate in turn was Jon’s Spring Valley neighbor. After Jon left Marnell in 2001, he became a founding principal architect at YWS Design & Architecture. Although he has retired from full-time architecture, Jon has since designed the Temple for Congregation Ner Tamid (pictured above) and The Center (Las Vegas's gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, queer community center). Jon remains active in the AIA Las Vegas Chapter as the incoming president as well as serving as a board member for Jewish Family Services Agency and The Center.

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