Tropicana Avenue over Interstate 15 is scheduled to close next weekend for crews to increase road capacity ahead of the Super Bowl.
Super Bowl
The NFL’s Super Bowl 58 “Green Week” is a series of events that aim to leave a legacy in the form of vegetation long after the international spectacle moves on.
Planning for the Super Bowl began more than two years ago, and the NFL and its Las Vegas partners are close to reaping the benefits from a worldwide audience.
Almost 14,000 people applied for unpaid positions guiding tourists around Las Vegas for Super Bowl LVIII in three weeks.
Taste of the NFL, a fundraiser to tackle childhood hunger, will feature dishes from more than 25 local and national chefs, along with appearances by NFL legends.
CBS is featuring seven hours of pregame coverage beginning Feb. 10 from Las Vegas. The Super Bowl is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. Feb. 11.
The Air Force thunderbirds will be part of the festivities when the NFL championship game comes to Allegiant Stadium for the first time next month.
For four dream-fulfilling days, NFL fans can immersive themselves in over two dozen football-based attractions, from two-minute drills to photo-ops with the aforementioned gargantuan head gear.
As Blake Shelton has opened his Ole Red country-music fortress on the Strip, Gwen Stefani has announced she will host the Super Bowl TikTok Tailgate livestream party.
Clark County will send texts every Sunday announcing traffic impacts so motorists can plan for the week ahead.
An agreement between the National Football League and Clark County will allow Super Bowl ads to be displayed on pedestrian bridges ahead of the big game.
The NFL wasted no time getting Allegiant Stadium ready for the Super Bowl on Feb. 11, arriving one day after the Raiders season ended.
A portion of the Fountains of Bellagio on the Las Vegas Strip is being transformed into a television set for Super Bowl broadcasts on CBS.
Road closures surrounding Allegiant Stadium are expected to increase as Super Bowl week approaches.
With Las Vegas set to host the Super Bowl in a few short months, the National Football League provided a glimpse of what the festivities could look like.