Mob Museum - Las Vegas, NV
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member NW_history_buff
N 36° 10.361 W 115° 08.478
11S E 667163 N 4004702
This former post office underwent a major renovation and earned a LEED silver status after completion in 2012 and is currently home to the Mob Museum. Admission fees apply to visit.
Waymark Code: WM13T2Y
Location: Nevada, United States
Date Posted: 02/13/2021
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member wayfrog
Views: 5

After reading a web page highlight, I discovered that the former historic post office that is currently home to the Mob Museum is a LEED certified building with silver status. The website provides a background on the building's history and reads:

This building at 300 Stewart Avenue in downtown Las Vegas opened in 1933 as the U.S. Post Office and Courthouse. Las Vegas is still a young city — it got its start in 1905 — so by local standards it’s a very old building, so much so that it’s listed on the Nevada and National Register of Historic Places.

The timing of the building’s construction is significant. Federal officials started scouting sites for their local presence in 1929 — not long after plans were announced for the construction of Hoover Dam, thirty miles south of Las Vegas. They knew this town was going to grow and would need a federal building. Perhaps they also followed all kinds of murky money trails that led out this way, and figured they’d best set up shop.

Construction began in 1931, and the building was dedicated on November 27, 1933. From the beginning, it was best known as a post office. The courthouse was not heavily used in the early years, as Nevada’s only federal judge was more than 400 miles away in the state capital of Carson City. So judges from Los Angeles and San Francisco traveled here twice a year to hear cases. That practice persisted until in 1945, when Las Vegas got its first full-time appointed judge.

It wasn’t too long before the building gained national attention. The courthouse was the setting for one of the famed Kefauver Committee hearings. On November 15, 1950, the U.S. Senate Special Committee to Investigate Organized Crime in Interstate Commerce, led by Tennessee Senator Estes Kefauver, heard testimony in the courtroom on the second floor (which has since been restored to reflect what it looked like at the time of the hearing). The Kefauver hearings, held in fourteen different cities, ultimately exposed much of the seedy underbelly of organized crime across America, particularly in Las Vegas. A lot of pretty unsavory stuff started coming out in the wash. Not all of it, pal … but plenty.

In 2002, the feds sold the building to the City of Las Vegas for $1, with the stipulation that it be preserved and used as a cultural center. Preferably, a museum. Then-Mayor Oscar Goodman, who had represented mobsters as a defense attorney, proposed a museum that would explore the complicated history of the Mob, and its mostly hidden role in society. With the support of federal, state and local grants, the building was renovated. The nation’s leading museum designers were hired to create an institution telling the true story of organized crime and law enforcement in America. We think they did a pretty good job. And if you know what’s good for you, you’ll think so, too. Maybe even tell your friends, eh?

The Mob Museum opened on February 14, 2012, and has played an important role in the revival of downtown Las Vegas. After the renovations that restored many of the building’s historical features, it earned LEED Silver certification.

The LEED web page that noted the silver status is located here.

Certification Level: Silver

Website: [Web Link]

Rating:

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