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The hospital opened in 1959 as North Las Vegas Hospital with 33 beds. It was later renamed Community Hospital and Lake Mead Hospital Medical Center and has undergone several expansions, including construction of the west tower and Women's Plaza complex in the mid 1990s. In 2014, its former owner IASIS Healthcare sold it to Prime Healthcare ...
State Route 147 (SR 147) is a state highway serving the Las Vegas Valley in southern Nevada.It is signed as Lake Mead Boulevard and runs from Interstate 15 (I-15) and U.S. Route 93 (US 93) in North Las Vegas east to the border of the Lake Mead National Recreation Area.
It is located in the states of Nevada and Arizona, 24 mi (39 km) east of Las Vegas. It is the largest reservoir in the US in terms of water capacity. Lake Mead provides water to the states of Arizona, California, and Nevada as well as some of Mexico, providing sustenance to nearly 20 million people and large areas of farmland. [1]
Kyle Ranch or Kiel Ranch, [note 1] was one of the earliest ranches established in Nevada's Las Vegas Valley.Founded by Conrad Kiel in 1875, today the location of the former ranch is in North Las Vegas, where the city maintains the remnants of the site as the "Kiel Ranch Historic Park."
View from the west end of SR 146 looking eastbound. The original segment of SR 146 was known as State Route 41 (Lake Mead Drive) until the early-1980s. Originally, it was a 19 mi (31 km) route that began at the current western terminus at Interstate 15 and crossed Boulder Highway in Henderson before ending at the intersection of North Shore Road near Lake Mead.
View from the north end of SR 169 looking southbound. State Route 169 begins approximately 1.5 miles (2.4 km) north of the intersection of Northshore Road and Valley of Fire Road, at the northern boundary of the Lake Mead National Recreation Area. From this point, SR 169 winds northward approximately 5 miles (8.0 km) before entering the rural ...
The most developed sections of the pueblo is partially submerged under the Overton arm of Lake Mead, 5 mi south of Overton as a result of building Boulder Dam. [2] [9] The site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on October 8, 1982. [10] Location of other related ruins:
The Lost City Museum shares its location with an actual prehistoric site of the Ancestral Puebloans.The museum was built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in 1935 and was operated by the National Park Service to exhibit artifacts from the Pueblo Grande de Nevada archaeological sites, which were going to be partially covered by the waters of Lake Mead as a result of building the Hoover Dam.