Quick Facts
| Item | Detail |
|---|
| Canopy shows | Hourly, sunset-1am |
| Canopy length | 1,375 ft |
| Pedestrian mall | 5 blocks |
| SlotZilla low | $29 day / $39 night |
| SlotZilla high | $59 day / $69 night |
| Oldest casino | Golden Gate (1906) |
| Typical table min | $5-10 blackjack |
Fremont Street is the historic heart of Las Vegas — the stretch where every 1940s-50s Rat Pack photo was taken, where the Flamingo wasn't yet built and the Strip didn't exist. In 1995 the city enclosed five blocks under a giant LED canopy and turned it into a pedestrian entertainment zone.
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Calculate now →The Viva Vision Canopy
The "Viva Vision" canopy is 1,375 feet long and 90 feet high — the largest single LED display in the world. It upgraded to 16.4 million pixels in 2019 and runs free 6-7 minute shows every hour from sunset until 1am.
- Shows rotate — typical lineup: Queen, Michael Jackson, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Imagine Dragons
- Sound blasts from 600,000 watts of concert-grade speakers
- During the show, lights in ground-level bars dim to black
- Best viewing spot: middle of the mall between 3rd and Main
- Seasonal themed shows (Halloween, Christmas, New Year countdown)
The canopy lighting and music effectively turns five city blocks into a block party for 7 minutes every hour. It's the single most distinctive free attraction in Vegas and the reason Fremont feels different from anywhere else in the world.
Old Vegas Casinos
Fremont's casinos are smaller, older and more generous with table rules than the Strip equivalents. Eight casinos line the five-block pedestrian zone.
| Casino | Opened | Known for |
|---|
| Golden Gate | 1906 | Oldest in Vegas, shrimp cocktail |
| Golden Nugget | 1946 | Best hotel on Fremont, pool with shark tank |
| Binion's | 1951 | Birthplace of WSOP, $1M display |
| Four Queens | 1966 | Loose slots, old-school feel |
| Fremont | 1956 | Second-oldest, locals casino |
| The D | 2012 | Modern rebuild of Fitzgeralds |
| Circa | 2020 | Newest downtown, rooftop pool |
| Plaza | 1971 | Historic Union Pacific rail station site |
For low-stakes table play, walk into Golden Gate, Four Queens or the D — $5 and $10 minimum blackjack tables are common, with 3:2 payouts. Most Strip casinos now pay 6:5 or require $25+ minimums.
SlotZilla Zipline
SlotZilla is a 12-story slot-machine-themed zipline launch tower at the east end of Fremont Street. Two options:
- Zipline (lower, seated): $29 day / $39 night — 77 ft high, half the length
- Zoomline (upper, superman-style): $59 day / $69 night — 114 ft high, full length
- Zoomline runs the full length of the canopy — 1,700 ft total
- Hours: 1pm-1am typically (weather permitting)
- Weight limits: 60-300 lbs
The Zoomline is the better experience — you're flat, arms-out, and zip under the full canopy during an LED show (with luck on timing). The lower Zipline is shorter and less photogenic.
Container Park
Downtown Container Park sits three blocks east of Fremont Street at 7th Street and Fremont. It's an open-air shopping and dining complex built from repurposed shipping containers — plus a 40-foot fire-breathing mantis sculpture at the entrance (an original Burning Man art piece).
- Free entry — 21+ after 9pm
- 30+ small retailers and restaurants in containers
- Central playground with three-story treehouse slide
- Free live music most evenings
- Mantis fires 20-foot flames on the hour after sunset
- Best eats: Big Ern's BBQ, Cheffini's Hot Dogs, Pinches Tacos
Container Park, combined with the surrounding Fremont East Entertainment District (bars, tattoo shops, small venues), is the hipster counterweight to the old casinos. It's walking distance but feels like a different neighborhood.
Vegas Vic and Signs
Fremont Street is a working museum of classic neon. Several original signs from the 1940s-50s still operate:
- Vegas Vic — 40-ft cowboy at Pioneer Club (1951), waves with neon glow
- Vegas Vickie — Vic's female counterpart, moved to Circa in 2020
- Golden Nugget vertical — restored 1946 original
- Binion's horseshoe — iconic gold neon
- Nearby: Neon Museum Boneyard ($20 entry, 3-block walk north) — 250+ retired casino signs
The Neon Museum is one of the most Instagram-worthy stops in Vegas — book a sunset or nighttime "Brilliant" tour when the signs are lit up. Separate attraction, 10-minute walk from Fremont.
Fremont vs the Strip
| Factor | Fremont | Strip |
|---|
| Vibe | Old Vegas, casual | New Vegas, luxury |
| Table minimums | $5-10 | $25-100 |
| Walking distance | 5 blocks | 4 miles |
| Rooms from | $45 | $100 |
| Food | Cheap + diners | Celeb chefs + expensive |
| Crowd | Mixed ages, locals | Bachelor/ette, tourists |
| Best for | Day/night combo, low-stakes | Shows, luxury, shopping |
The ideal Vegas trip combines both. Spend 1-2 days on the Strip for the big resorts and shows, then one evening on Fremont for the light shows, cheaper gambling, and a genuine sense of how Vegas started. They're 20 minutes apart by rideshare.
Quick Facts
| Item | Detail |
|---|
| Canopy shows | Hourly, sunset-1am |
| Canopy length | 1,375 ft |
| Pedestrian mall | 5 blocks |
| SlotZilla low | $29 day / $39 night |
| SlotZilla high | $59 day / $69 night |
| Oldest casino | Golden Gate (1906) |
| Typical table min | $5-10 blackjack |
Fremont Street is the historic heart of Las Vegas — the stretch where every 1940s-50s Rat Pack photo was taken, where the Flamingo wasn't yet built and the Strip didn't exist. In 1995 the city enclosed five blocks under a giant LED canopy and turned it into a pedestrian entertainment zone.
🧮
USA Trip Cost Calculator
Planning a Las Vegas trip? Get a personalised Vegas travel budget — Strip hotels, Downtown, shows, food and transport.
Calculate now →The Viva Vision Canopy
The "Viva Vision" canopy is 1,375 feet long and 90 feet high — the largest single LED display in the world. It upgraded to 16.4 million pixels in 2019 and runs free 6-7 minute shows every hour from sunset until 1am.
- Shows rotate — typical lineup: Queen, Michael Jackson, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Imagine Dragons
- Sound blasts from 600,000 watts of concert-grade speakers
- During the show, lights in ground-level bars dim to black
- Best viewing spot: middle of the mall between 3rd and Main
- Seasonal themed shows (Halloween, Christmas, New Year countdown)
The canopy lighting and music effectively turns five city blocks into a block party for 7 minutes every hour. It's the single most distinctive free attraction in Vegas and the reason Fremont feels different from anywhere else in the world.
Old Vegas Casinos
Fremont's casinos are smaller, older and more generous with table rules than the Strip equivalents. Eight casinos line the five-block pedestrian zone.
| Casino | Opened | Known for |
|---|
| Golden Gate | 1906 | Oldest in Vegas, shrimp cocktail |
| Golden Nugget | 1946 | Best hotel on Fremont, pool with shark tank |
| Binion's | 1951 | Birthplace of WSOP, $1M display |
| Four Queens | 1966 | Loose slots, old-school feel |
| Fremont | 1956 | Second-oldest, locals casino |
| The D | 2012 | Modern rebuild of Fitzgeralds |
| Circa | 2020 | Newest downtown, rooftop pool |
| Plaza | 1971 | Historic Union Pacific rail station site |
For low-stakes table play, walk into Golden Gate, Four Queens or the D — $5 and $10 minimum blackjack tables are common, with 3:2 payouts. Most Strip casinos now pay 6:5 or require $25+ minimums.
SlotZilla Zipline
SlotZilla is a 12-story slot-machine-themed zipline launch tower at the east end of Fremont Street. Two options:
- Zipline (lower, seated): $29 day / $39 night — 77 ft high, half the length
- Zoomline (upper, superman-style): $59 day / $69 night — 114 ft high, full length
- Zoomline runs the full length of the canopy — 1,700 ft total
- Hours: 1pm-1am typically (weather permitting)
- Weight limits: 60-300 lbs
The Zoomline is the better experience — you're flat, arms-out, and zip under the full canopy during an LED show (with luck on timing). The lower Zipline is shorter and less photogenic.
Container Park
Downtown Container Park sits three blocks east of Fremont Street at 7th Street and Fremont. It's an open-air shopping and dining complex built from repurposed shipping containers — plus a 40-foot fire-breathing mantis sculpture at the entrance (an original Burning Man art piece).
- Free entry — 21+ after 9pm
- 30+ small retailers and restaurants in containers
- Central playground with three-story treehouse slide
- Free live music most evenings
- Mantis fires 20-foot flames on the hour after sunset
- Best eats: Big Ern's BBQ, Cheffini's Hot Dogs, Pinches Tacos
Container Park, combined with the surrounding Fremont East Entertainment District (bars, tattoo shops, small venues), is the hipster counterweight to the old casinos. It's walking distance but feels like a different neighborhood.
Vegas Vic and Signs
Fremont Street is a working museum of classic neon. Several original signs from the 1940s-50s still operate:
- Vegas Vic — 40-ft cowboy at Pioneer Club (1951), waves with neon glow
- Vegas Vickie — Vic's female counterpart, moved to Circa in 2020
- Golden Nugget vertical — restored 1946 original
- Binion's horseshoe — iconic gold neon
- Nearby: Neon Museum Boneyard ($20 entry, 3-block walk north) — 250+ retired casino signs
The Neon Museum is one of the most Instagram-worthy stops in Vegas — book a sunset or nighttime "Brilliant" tour when the signs are lit up. Separate attraction, 10-minute walk from Fremont.
Fremont vs the Strip
| Factor | Fremont | Strip |
|---|
| Vibe | Old Vegas, casual | New Vegas, luxury |
| Table minimums | $5-10 | $25-100 |
| Walking distance | 5 blocks | 4 miles |
| Rooms from | $45 | $100 |
| Food | Cheap + diners | Celeb chefs + expensive |
| Crowd | Mixed ages, locals | Bachelor/ette, tourists |
| Best for | Day/night combo, low-stakes | Shows, luxury, shopping |
The ideal Vegas trip combines both. Spend 1-2 days on the Strip for the big resorts and shows, then one evening on Fremont for the light shows, cheaper gambling, and a genuine sense of how Vegas started. They're 20 minutes apart by rideshare.