Located just a short walk from Fremont Street, the Downtown Container Park is a fun outdoor mall with bars, cafes, and cute little boutique shops.
Located just a short walk from Fremont Street, the Downtown Container Park is a fun outdoor mall with bars, cafes, and cute little boutique shops.
Start your visit at the Container Park, an open-air venue where shipping containers are repurposed to house clothing boutiques, restaurants, bars, a wedding chapel and more.
Container Park’s Oak & Ivy may feel like one of those trendy speakeasies you’ve visited before — yes, your bartender will have on a bowtie and, yes, that is a TV sitting in the gold picture frame — but there’s nothing clichéd about its drinks.
In Downtown, on the other side of Las Vegas Boulevard from the freakishly touristy Fremont Street Experience (the Zoomline zipline is five blocks long) is Fremont East, several square blocks of small, hip restaurants, chic and quirky bars, public art and a grocery store.
With its nod to the ‘70s and Moscow Mules on tap (crafted with house-made ginger beer), Corduroy is the place to see and be seen.
By now, adult milkshakes are on just about every menu in Las Vegas, but Fiddlestix might be the first restaurant to serve a giant version.
Las Vegas caught the shipping container bug nearly five years ago.
For a unique and unforgettable shopping experience, check out the Container Park in downtown Las Vegas.
There is also the Downtown Container Park, a shopping and entertainment complex built entirely of shipping containers (the first of its kind in the U.
If you aren’t done drinking and partying, there are a lot of ways to get in trouble in the Downtown area.