| THE FORUM
SHOPS AT CAESARS
The Forum Shops at Caesars, The Shopping Wonder of
the World, hosts approximately 100 retailers and restaurateurs housed in palatial splendor
at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas.
Opened May 1, 1992, the shopping attraction is an
integral part of the bustling activity in the Caesars casinos, adjoining the resort's
Forum Casino. The center routinely welcomes more than 50,000 people per day, while holiday
visitor volume easily can exceed 70,000 persons in a single day.
The Forum Shops at Caesars is a visual as well as a
retail attraction. Storefront facades and common areas resemble an ancient Roman
streetscape, with immense columns and arches, ornate fountains, massive piazzas and
classic statuary. Overhead, on a barrel-vaulted ceiling, a painted sky emulates a changing
Mediterranean day.
Shopping is fun at the Forum. Every hour, on the
hour, the Festival Fountain comes alive with a realistic special effects show that
includes lasers, computerized dancing waters and robotic statues. Here, Bacchus, Plutus,
Venus and Apollo have a party, inviting all of their Forum visitors to join them. A second
robotic statue show is featured hourly in the west corridor, where lifelike animatronic
figures of mythology's Neptune and his feuding children reenact the tragic story of
Atlantis. The two moving statues shows are presented daily free of charge.
Adjoining the Atlantis statues is a 50,000-gallon
saltwater aquarium with hundreds of tropical fish from 25 fish families. Aquascaping was
designed by Los Angeles -based architect Terry Dougall (designer of the Forum Shops at
Caesars) to represent the legendary sunken city of Atlantis. Consulting fisheries
biologist Brian Baldassian supervised the aquarium project.. Included are both solitary
and schooling fish - many indigenous to Caribbean coral reefs. On weekend afternoons, a
marine biologist, assisted by a scuba-diving aquarist, gathers young visitors to describe
the marine life; these sessions are timed during fish feedings, when some of the shyer
species, like sting rays and baby sharks, are likely to appear.
Combining shopping with entertainment makes The
Forum Shops at Caesars a destination attraction in Las Vegas. A half-court basketball
arena and treadmill machines in the athletic shoe store Just For Feet offer customers the
opportunity to test run their purchases. Magic Masters, designed as a replica of Harry
Houdini's private library, features magical demonstrations to passersby; prospective
buyers are escorted through a secret door into a secret room to learn how to perform an
illusion. The Warner Bros. Studios Store has a video wall showcasing new movie trailers,
popular cartoons and bloopers from classic films, as well as a free make your own cartoon
discovery area for young visitors. The award-winning Caesars Exclusively! store, which
sells Caesars brand leisure wear, accessories and fragrance, celebrates the sports and
gaming tradition of Caesars Palace with its sculpted marble roulette wheel in the foyer
floor and in other specialty display fixtures.
Internationally celebrated designers like Versace,
Bernini, Armani, Christian Dior, Louis Vuitton, Gucci and Escada are among the many
prestigious tenants, as are Wolfgang Puck's Spago, The Palm, Chinois (a second Wolfgang
Puck restaurant), Cheesecake Factory, Caviarteria, Bertolini's, Stage Deli and Planet
Hollywood.
From the casino, guests enter The Forum Shops at
Caesars at the Fortuna Terrace under an arch that stands 48 feet high. A statue of the
goddess Fortuna is the centerpiece of the rotunda, which is surrounded by a Roman
colonnade and ceiling-high recessed arches that house replicas of classic statuary. The
Warner Bros. store in this area gently chides the Palace decor with its statues of Porky
Pig and Wile E. Coyote dressed in Roman garb.
A transition area from casino to shopping street,
the Fortuna Terrace flooring is made of imported Italian marble. At the apex of the
L-shaped facility, under a rotunda measuring 62 feet high by 140 feet in diameter, the
Fountain of the Gods recaptures the grandeur of Rome's fountains, with Jupiter ruling from
his mountain surrounded by Pegasus, the winged horse, Mars, Venus, Neptune and Diana. The
nearby Bertolini's Italian restaurant offers its version of al fresco dining with outdoor
as well as indoor seating.
Near the Festival Fountain at the Las Vegas
Boulevard entrance are the Forum's lower level attractions, which include the CyberStation
game arcade and Cinema Ride.
Pedestrians along the famed Las Vegas Strip enter
the Forum Shops through a rotunda under its brilliant Quadriga statue -- four gold-leafed
horses and charioteer. A moving walkway brings visitors in and out, through five giant
heroic arches -- an ancient symbol of great achievement.
In addition to the valet parking available in the
underground traffic tunnel at Caesars Boulevard (north driveway), the shopping plaza
offers self-parking in the Caesars Palace free covered parking facilities.
The Forum Shops at Caesars is located on eight acres
of Caesars Palace land leased to developers Simon DeBartolo Group, of Indianapolis, and
The Gordon Company, of Los Angeles. Designed by Dougall Design Associates, Inc., of Los
Angeles, it was constructed by Las Vegas-based Marnell Corrao and Associates.
The Forum Shops at Caesars was expanded in August
1997 by 283,000 square feet of leasable space, bringing the total to more than 500,000
square feet of gross leasable space. Included in the August addition were 35 new merchants
and 3 new restaurants. At the west end of the added shopping corridor is a Roman Great
Hall measuring 85 feet high and spanning 160 feet in diameter, where shoppers are
entertained each hour by the Atlantis moving statue attraction. The Atlantis story line
has inspired the addition of the nearby Race For Atlantis
IMAX 3-D motion simulator adventure ride. Opened
Jan. 9, 1998, "Race For Atlantis" is a joint venture of IMAX and Caesars Palace.
The adventure ride is the first attraction of its kind to combine 3D imagery on a giant
domed screen (which measures 82 feet across).
Shopping hours are from 10 a.m. until 11 p.m. Sunday
through Thursday, 10 a.m. to midnight Friday and Saturday (some restaurant hours later). |