VEGAS MYTHS RE-BUSTED: The Old MGM Grand Was Imploded After the Fire
Posted on: March 14, 2025, 07:30h.
Last updated on: March 14, 2025, 08:38h.
- Many people think the original MGM Grand hotel, where 87 died in a tragic 1980 fire, was imploded and rebuilt
- Instead, it became Bally’s, which is now Horsehoe, while today’s MGM Grand was built a mile south
- Since the fire, millions have slept in the very same upper-floor rooms of the original tower where 64 people died of asphyxiation
EDITOR’S NOTE: “Vegas Myths Busted” publishes new entries every Monday, with a bonus Flashback Friday edition. Today’s entry in our ongoing series originally ran on Aug. 26, 2022.
A common myth surrounds the MGM Grand fire on Nov. 21, 1980. But the truth is more disturbing than the fiction obscuring it.

When the original MGM Grand opened in 1973 with more than 2,100 hotel rooms, it was known as one of the world’s largest hotels. But after Nov. 21, 1980, it was known only as the site of one of the world’s worst hotel fires.
The tragedy claimed the lives of 87 people. Only the Winecoff Hotel fire, which killed 119 on Dec. 7, 1946, in downtown Atlanta, was worse. Luckily, helicopters from nearby Nellis Air Force Base could snatch more than 1,000 people from the roof of the MGM or the death toll would have broken that record.
Myth Interpreted
Many people believe the MGM Grand was demolished after the devastating fire, either because of extensive fire damage or because the building had too much bad juju. This myth is so pervasive, it even appeared as a fact in the 2009 edition of Frommer’s Las Vegas.
The truth is there was fire damage to the building, but it was contained to the casino and first floor, and didn’t cause serious structural damage. There was bad juju, too, but it didn’t cause MGM to implode and rebuild the property.
Fiery Details
At 7 a.m. on Nov. 21, 1980, faulty wiring in a deli at the East end of the casino sparked a small fire. The deli wasn’t open yet; a casino worker noticed the smoke and called security. He searched frantically for an extinguisher, but couldn’t locate one. At the time, there were no automatic sprinklers in that part of the casino.
Sixty-four of the 87 victims died on floors 19-24 of the hotel tower, half in their rooms, from inhaling the thick black smoke and carbon monoxide that poured through the air conditioning ducts and accumulated into a dense cloud. Many of the victims were likely still asleep in their beds.
A Legacy Up in Smoke

The MGM Grand reopened eight months after the fire with automatic sprinklers, smoke detectors and emergency stairwell lighting. That was not because of the tragedy, however. A safety commission convened by Nevada Governor Bob List recommended the changes, but buckled under pressure from the gaming industry, which valued saving money over saving lives.
The recommendations were amended. As submitted, they only required the changes in new construction.
The real reason for the introduction and passage of Senate Bill 214, which included all of the commission’s original recommendations, occurred 12 weeks later. It was a less-remembered second fire at the Las Vegas Hilton that killed eight people.
As part of a $50 million remodel, a second 26-story tower was added to the original MGM Grand later in 1981. But visitation slumped because of bad publicity from the fire and years of ensuing litigation.
An investigation into the fire yielded many disturbing details. For instance, installing the automatic sprinklers that the Las Vegas Fire Marshal originally recommended, back when the original MGM Grand was first built from 1972 to 1973, would have added only $200K to the $106 million contstruction costs. Yet the hotel refused, and the Clark County Building Department took its side, stating that because the building operated 24/7, automatic sprinklers weren’t required throughout the premises.
More than 1,350 legal claims resulted from the fire’s deaths and injuries, and the MGM Grand eventually agreed to pay $223 million to settle them. Las Vegas, at the time, didn’t have enough law firms to handle all the litigation.
Soured of operating this gigantic monument to failure and death, the MGM sold the hotel and the MGM Grand Reno to pinball and slot machine maker Bally Manufacturing in April 1986.
Rising From the Ashes
Quietly, MGM Grand owner Kirk Kerkorian began acquiring the property to build today’s MGM Grand a mile south of the old one.
Bally’s, the old MGM Grand, has switched hands several more times. Hilton Hotels acquired the property in 1996 and spun its casino resorts division into Park Place Entertainment, which was renamed Caesars Entertainment and acquired by Harrah’s Entertainment in 2005.

Now, the old MGM Grand has been rebranded again. Since December 2022, it’s been the Horseshoe. Caesars renamed it to play up its role as the new host of the World Series of Poker. Binion’s Horseshoe was the original name of Binion’s Gambling Hall in downtown Las Vegas, which launched the WSOP in 1970.
A Disturbing Truth
Busting the myth of the imploded MGM Grand reveals a disturbing truth…
In the decades since the fire, about 10 million guests have slept in the very same upper-floor rooms of the original tower where 64 people died. That tower is now the only tower remaining at Horseshoe, after Caesars Entertainment transferred its newer tower, known as either the North or Jubilee tower, to Paris Las Vegas in 2023.
Look for “Vegas Myths Busted” every Monday on Casino.org. Visit VegasMythsBusted.com to read previously busted Vegas myths. Got a suggestion for a Vegas myth that needs busting? Email corey@casino.org.
Related News Articles
VEGAS MYTHS RE-BUSTED: Casinos Pump in Extra Oxygen
VEGAS MYTHS BUSTED: Near Myths — Stories So Wild, They Seem Fake But Aren’t
Most Popular
MGM Osaka Breaks Ground on $8.9 Billion Resort, Japan’s First Casino
Most Commented
-
Two More Las Vegas Poker Rooms Reportedly Leaving Casino Floors
April 23, 2025 — 12 Comments— -
Caesars Refuses to Pay Sports Bettor’s $800K in Winnings
April 27, 2025 — 9 Comments—
No comments yet