San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)
SPEND $12K TO WATCH RACE IN LAP OF LUXURY?
Mary and Troy Trimble, Formula One fans from the Pacific Northwest, pushed the accelerator to the floor this week for the Las Vegas Grand Prix.
They didn’t just want to experience the event from the grandstands, a pricey endeavor in its own right. No, they paid about $12,000 each to watch the three-day race in luxury.
The couple from Spokane, Wash., were among the 3,600 people who bought sold-out passes to the Fountain Club at the Bellagio Hotel & Casino, an extravagant two-level structure built over the resort’s famed dancing fountains and long as three football fields.
“We got into this in the last two years, mostly because of the Netflix show, ‘Drive to Survive,’ ” said Troy Trimble, a software engineer at Google. “We were considering going to Austin (Texas) because they have the race out there every year, but when we found out they were having this in Vegas we were set to go.
“We saved up, made it our big expenditure for this year, and we’re psyched to see how they’re going to do it.”
The Fountain Club is a temporary structure with a permanent feel, even though the Bellagio was scheduled to begin deconstructing it as soon as the F1 race ended late Saturday night, once again revealing the popular fountains to the general public. Although resort representatives declined to specify how much was spent on the structure, the investment clearly is considerable, with the plan being to rebuild the structure for the race on an annual basis. There is currently a three-year commitment for the race, but plans are for F1 to stay for at least a decade.
“We wanted to show the international world what Vegas felt like,” said Andrew Lanzino, vice president of citywide events for MGM Resorts.
The massive structure includes elevators and kitchens that are resupplied by food and drinks ferried across the lake by boat.
On the lower floor is an upscale restaurant featuring 16 famous chefs and individual food stations, with tables overlooking the Las Vegas Strip, where cars will reach speeds of 200 mph or more. Just outside are hundreds of padded grandstand seats for Fountain Club patrons to watch in open air.
“We wanted to see the spectacle,” said Mary Trimble, a retired helicopter pilot. “We figured it was a once-ina-lifetime experience — or maybe once in 10 years.”
On the other end of the spectrum, F1 fans upset at being forced to leave the venue early Friday morning before the start of the second practice session filed a classaction lawsuit in Nevada state court seeking at least $30,000 in damages.