flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Experience Possibilities: The Linq Hotel and Casino

Sponsored Content Walls and Partitions

Experience Possibilities: The Linq Hotel and Casino

Architectural vision, fabrication know-how and ALPOLIC® materials transform the Las Vegas dreamscape.


June 4, 2015
Experience Possibilities: The Linq Hotel and Casino

High Roller loading area clad in ALPOLIC®/fr

Las Vegas is built on dreams and possibilities. Like the new Linq Promenade. It’s anchored at one end by the High Roller, the world’s tallest observation wheel at 550 feet. At the other end is The Linq Hotel & Casino, a $230 million “play, eat, party” destination that defies all ordinary architectural expectations.

To guests looking for good times, ALPOLIC® materials help make a dreamlike experience possible.

High Roller riders are surrounded by ALPOLIC® materials as they ascend the ramp, then watch their cabin approach through a radiused, tunnel-like channel that adds drama in anticipation of the butterfly-inducing views to come. Heading back to the 2,640-room hotel, guests are greeted by ALPOLIC® materials fabricated into monumental forms and colors, with hardly a straight line or flat surface to be found.

Consider the massive, matching canopies that can be found in various places – for example, over the hotel’s porte-cochère entrance. The fascia of each canopy slopes inward and gets narrower from top to bottom, meeting the convex radius of the structure’s ceiling. Every panel joins its neighbors perfectly from multiple directions, in multiple planes.

Some canopies feature oculus openings that let in sunlight and provide a view of the High Roller and other overhead features. For these, ALPOLIC® panels were tapered to fit the radius of the canopy, given a convex radius to fit the interior of the oculus, then lowered into place and glued to a narrow band around the opening.

“Vortex” deck and canopy, clad in ALPOLIC® materials

One of The Linq’s most striking features is the roof deck used for fashion shows, concerts and private events. It features a central “vortex” of colorful LED lights suspended between the deck and overhead canopy. These, too, are clad with ALPOLIC® materials fabricated to create complex tapers and radiuses that give the structure the feeling of a waterspout forming over ocean waves.

The deck is supported at the outside corner by a 30-foot cigar-shaped column, echoing the design of the columns that support canopies throughout the development. Each pair of panels has a compound radius that varies from top to bottom, designed and fabricated to fit perfectly together when lowered into place layer by layer.

The project uses three panel colors – silver metallic, champagne metallic and mica platinum – installed in patterns to create an enchanting, subtly dimensional effect. Because these are directional finishes, fabricators needed to make sure each panel was in the correct orientation before cutting, shaping and marking for installation position.

It all comes together beautifully, as if the details were dreamed into being. But it’s real, and in every aspect The Linq reveals what’s truly possible – thanks to the design vision of Klai Juba Wald Architects, the fabrication ingenuity of Engineered Wall Systems, Inc., and the remarkable versatility of ALPOLIC® materials.

Related Stories

| May 14, 2013

Easy net-zero energy buildings [infographic]

"Be a Zero Hero" infographic educates building industry professionals on ultra energy-efficient structural insulated panel construction

| Apr 23, 2013

Building material innovation: Concrete cloth simplifies difficult pours

Milliken recently debuted a flexible fabric that allows for concrete installations on slopes, in water, and in other hard to reach places—without the need for molds or mixing.

| Apr 16, 2013

5 projects that profited from insulated metal panels

From an orchid-shaped visitor center to California’s largest public works project, each of these projects benefited from IMP technology.

| Mar 29, 2013

Sheetrock Brand UltraLight Panels first and only ICC ES compliant panel for ceilings

USG Corporation, a leading building products company and the industry innovator in lightweight drywall, is pleased to announce that its award-winning SHEETROCK® UltraLight Panels are now ICC Evaluation Services compliant for installation on ceilings with the long edges parallel to the framing.

| Mar 20, 2013

Folding glass walls revitalize student center

Single-glazed storefronts in the student center at California’s West Valley College were replaced with aluminum-framed, thermally broken windows from NanaWall in a bronze finish that emulates the look of the original building.

| Feb 28, 2013

Lend Lease builds world's tallest timber apartment building

Construction giant Lend Lease recently put the finishing touches on Forté, a 10-story apartment complex in Melbourne, Australia's Victoria Harbour that was built entirely with cross laminated timber (CTL) technology.

| Sep 7, 2012

The keys to success in the K-12 school market

When educators and school administrators describe their vision for new K-12 school buildings as ‘21st-century learning spaces,’ they’re not exaggerating. Many new schools are truly different in concept from their counterparts of only a few years ago.

| Jul 13, 2012

July 2012: Products at Work

Panel wall system, folding windows, rubber flooring, wire mesh railings.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021