UNLV & the Thomas & Mack Center
The University of Nevada, Las Vegas was established in 1957 and its arena, the Thomas & Mack Center, opened in 1983 on the Maryland Parkway campus. Both sit in county-governed Paradise.12
District E . Deep Dive . Places & Landmarks
A major airport. A public research university. Long stretches of the most famous resort corridor on earth. A nature preserve on the desert's edge. The east valley carries a lot of what makes Las Vegas, Las Vegas.
A guide to what sits in and around District E, verified for what it is and where it is. District E includes only portions of several townships, so the honest framing is "in and around." Where a place is downtown or in another township, it is labeled plainly.
District E does not own these landmarks. It shares the ground they sit on. Here is how this guide handles that.
District E is drawn from portions of Paradise, Sunrise Manor, Winchester, and Whitney, so almost nothing sits "entirely in the district" in a clean way.14 Rather than overclaim, this guide names the township a place sits in whenever that is confirmed, and uses "in and around the district" otherwise. Where a landmark is actually downtown, in the City of Las Vegas, or in a neighboring area, it says so.
The point is not to plant a flag on every famous building. It is to help a resident understand the ground they live on, and to be straight about what is verified and what is not. For your own address and your own commission district, the county's official map is the only authority.14
Most first-time visitors assume the Strip is downtown Las Vegas. It is not. The majority of the Strip sits in the unincorporated towns of Paradise and Winchester, which means it is governed by the Clark County Commission, not a city council. The same is true of the airport and UNLV: county ground, not city ground.11
Tap any place to read its story. Each is verified for what it is and where it sits.
Tap any place to read its story
The University of Nevada, Las Vegas was established in 1957 and its arena, the Thomas & Mack Center, opened in 1983 on the Maryland Parkway campus. Both sit in county-governed Paradise.12
One of the nation's busiest airports sits in unincorporated Paradise, about five miles from downtown. It opened in 1943 as Alamo Field, became McCarran in 1948, and was renamed for Senator Harry Reid by the county in 2021.3
The majority of the Strip sits in unincorporated Paradise, with its northern end in Winchester. Almost no major Strip resort is inside the City of Las Vegas; the corridor is county jurisdiction.11
One of Clark County's largest developed parks, around 324 acres near Sunset and Eastern. The county bought the former Houssels Ranch land in 1967 and named it Sunset Park in 1968.4
The largest park in the county system, roughly 2,900 acres along the Las Vegas Wash on the valley's east side. The park dates to 1991; its LEED Gold nature center opened in 2013.5
Nevada's first enclosed, climate-controlled shopping mall, opened March 6, 1968 on Maryland Parkway. For years it was the valley's retail anchor; today it is being reinvented.6
An open-air shopping and entertainment district on East Sahara, established in 1963 by Jerome Mack and Merv Adelson. Billed as the valley's first outdoor modern shopping center, it predates the Boulevard Mall.7
Clark County's cultural center for visual and performing arts, dedicated in 1982. It holds the county's only indoor theater, and the "Dondero" name honors the late Commissioner Thalia Dondero.8
The east valley's signature peaks. Frenchman Mountain rises about 2,000 feet above the valley and exposes the Great Unconformity, where rock layers are separated by roughly 1.2 billion years.9
A historic arterial built in 1931 for Hoover Dam construction, running southeast through the Whitney and Sunrise Manor areas. Its name survives from the dam's original "Boulder Dam" plan; it is the focus of a major safety redesign.10
Township is named where confirmed; otherwise "in and around the district" is used. Boundaries shift between redistricting cycles, so confirm any single place against the county's official district map.14
Nine decades of the places that built this side of town, in the order they arrived.
Read in order, it is the story of a desert edge becoming a city's east side: first a highway for a dam, then an airport, then a university, then the shopping and culture and parks that turn a place into a home. Almost all of it is county ground.
The east valley is the valley's college town, and it has been for nearly seventy years.
The University of Nevada, Las Vegas was established in 1957 as the southern division of the state university, and grew into a public research university on Maryland Parkway in Paradise.1 Its arena, the Thomas & Mack Center, opened in 1983 and is named for bankers E. Parry Thomas and Jerome Mack; for decades it has hosted Runnin' Rebels basketball and the National Finals Rodeo.2
Culture is not only on campus. The Winchester Dondero Cultural Center, dedicated in 1982, is a county facility for visual and performing arts and home to Clark County's only indoor theater. The "Dondero" honors the late Commissioner Thalia Dondero, who helped acquire the land.8
An international airport, a historic highway, and a transit corridor under construction all run through the east valley.
Harry Reid International Airport sits in unincorporated Paradise, about five miles south of downtown. It opened in 1943 as Alamo Field, became McCarran Field in 1948, and was renamed by the Clark County Commission in 2021 to honor the late Senator Harry Reid.3 It is one of the busiest airports in the country, and it is county ground, not city ground.
Boulder Highway was built in 1931 to carry workers and material to the Hoover Dam project, and its name is a remnant of the dam's original "Boulder Dam" plan.10 It runs southeast through the Whitney and Sunrise Manor areas and is the subject of a major safety redesign. Nearby, the Maryland Parkway corridor past UNLV is getting a bus rapid transit line, with completion targeted around 2026.13
Two of the county's most important parks sit on the east side of the valley.
Sunset Park is one of Clark County's largest developed parks, roughly 324 acres near Sunset Road and Eastern Avenue in Paradise. The county bought the former Houssels Ranch land in 1967 and named the park in 1968; the ground traces back to a 1909 federal homestead.4
The Clark County Wetlands Park is the largest park in the county system, about 2,900 acres along the Las Vegas Wash on the valley's east side. The park dates to 1991, and its 30,000-square-foot nature center, which earned LEED Gold certification, opened in 2013.5 Together they give the east valley real open space, not just pavement.
Two pieces of retail history, both on the east side, both ahead of their time.
The Historic Commercial Center District on East Sahara, in Winchester, was established in 1963 by Jerome Mack and Merv Adelson and designed by the architects Palmer & Krisel. It was billed as the valley's first outdoor modern shopping center, and it predates the valley's enclosed malls.7
A few years later, the Boulevard Mall opened on Maryland Parkway on March 6, 1968, as Nevada's first enclosed, climate-controlled shopping mall and the oldest mall in the valley.6 For a generation it was the east valley's commercial heart, and like the Commercial Center, it is now being reimagined for a new era.
The Strip everyone pictures as Las Vegas is governed by the same board that runs the townships.
The roughly four-mile hotel-casino stretch of Las Vegas Boulevard runs mostly through Paradise, with its northern end in Winchester.11 Almost no major Strip resort is inside the City of Las Vegas. The corridor is unincorporated county land, which is exactly why the Clark County Commission, and the District E seat as one of its seven votes, sits at the table for decisions about the region's economic engine.
The north end, in Winchester, includes the Sahara, Circus Circus, Resorts World, Westgate, and Fontainebleau stretch. That is the part of the Strip most tied to District E's central townships, and a reminder that the marquee and the neighborhoods are governed together.11
When the City of Las Vegas tried to annex the resort corridor in 1950, casino owners backed the creation of Paradise as an unincorporated town to keep it under county control. The structure has held for three quarters of a century, and the Strip has been county jurisdiction the entire time.11
The east valley's mountains are not just scenery. One of them is a geology lesson visible from the freeway.
Frenchman Mountain rises about 2,000 feet above the valley on its eastern edge, with the lower Sunrise Mountain nearby. Locals often conflate the two, but Frenchman is the larger, sharper peak.9 Frenchman is geologically famous: it exposes the Great Unconformity, where tilted ancient rock layers are separated by roughly 1.2 billion years, the same feature made famous by the Grand Canyon, here visible without a long hike.9
For a resident, the peaks are the backdrop to daily life on the east side. For a geologist, Frenchman Mountain is one of the most accessible windows into deep time anywhere in the country.
The east side of the district is also the east edge of the metro area, where neighborhoods give way to mountains and open desert.
Sunrise Manor sits at the western base of Frenchman Mountain, so for the eastern townships the peaks are not a distant view but the literal end of the street grid.9 To the north, near Sunrise Manor, the land runs up against Nellis Air Force Base, a major military neighbor whose presence shapes the northeast valley.9
It is a useful thing to picture: the same district that touches the bright north end of the Strip also reaches the quiet desert edge where the city stops. That range, from resort corridor to mountain base, is the east valley in a single district.
Not every landmark is a marquee. A private club, a transit spine, and a military neighbor all shape this side of town.
A private golf and membership club just east of the Strip in the Winchester area, with its course completed in 1967 on the former Las Vegas Park racetrack site.12
The retail and institutional corridor running past UNLV, hospitals, and the Boulevard Mall, now getting a roughly 12.5-mile bus rapid transit line.13
The east valley's signature peaks, with Frenchman exposing the Great Unconformity, a billion-year gap in the rock visible from near the valley floor.9
None of these is a tourist headline, and that is the point. A guide to the ground people actually live on has to include the club down the street, the road being rebuilt, and the mountain out the back window, not just the resorts the postcards show.
The thread tying the airport, the parks, and the Strip together is the same one that ties the townships together: the county.
It is easy to miss how much of this list is governed by the same board that represents District E. The Strip is unincorporated county land.11 The airport is operated by Clark County, which is why the County Commission was the body that renamed it in 2021.3 Sunset Park and the Wetlands Park are county parks.45 The Winchester Dondero Cultural Center is a county facility.8
That is the civics lesson hiding inside a landmarks tour. When you live in the east valley, the government most responsible for the places around you is not a city. It is Clark County, and the District E commissioner is your single vote on that board. Knowing the places is one more reason to know the seat.
The things people actually ask about the landmarks.
A few verified details that make the east valley make more sense.
For visitors the east valley is a strip of marquees. For residents it is where life actually happens.
Put the list together and a picture forms. A university where local kids get a degree. An airport where the whole region's jobs and visitors flow through. Parks where families spend a Saturday. A highway and a transit line that decide how long the commute takes. Mountains that mark the edge of home. These are not tourist attractions to the people who live here. They are the texture of an ordinary week.
That is why a campaign guide spends this much care on landmarks. Knowing the ground is the first step to caring for it, and the county that governs this ground is the one office most residents of the east valley actually get to vote on directly. The places are the reason the seat matters.
The Strip, the airport, the big parks, the cultural center: county ground, county facilities, county jurisdiction.113458 The District E commissioner is one of seven votes on all of it. A landmarks tour of the east valley is, quietly, a tour of why the county seat matters.
Landmarks are one part of the story. Here is the rest of the District E hub.
The full overview of District E: the office, where it is, how it got here, who lives here, and what the county does.
Paradise, Sunrise Manor, Winchester, and Whitney: why none of them is a city, and what the county runs.
The district in verified figures, and an honest account of the numbers that do not exist at the district level.
This is home.
People come from all over the world to see places that sit in our towns. The airport they land at, the university down the street, the parks our kids grow up in, the mountains behind the houses. I want District E to know that this ground is ours, and that the county we elect is the government that looks after it. Know the places, then hold the seat to them.
Civics should be checkable. Here is where each footnoted fact comes from.
How we handled the facts. Each place is verified for what it is and where it sits. The township is named only when confirmed; otherwise the guide uses "in and around the district." Where a place is downtown or in another township, it is labeled plainly rather than claimed for the district.
One source of truth. District lines shift between redistricting cycles. For whether any single place or address falls inside District E, the county's official map is the only authority. The links above go straight to it.
Found something to fix? If a fact here is out of date or a line needs a better source, the campaign wants to know. Accuracy is the whole point of a guide like this. Reach the team through the main site.