The 'Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas sign' is a
Las Vegas landmark created in 1959 by
Betty Willis and
Ted Rogich for
Clark County,
Nevada. Willis received $4,000 for her work. The design is characteristic of the
Googie architecture movement which was popular at the time. The sign was built by Western Neon. Over the years, the sign has been moved south several times on
Las Vegas Boulevard as growth has continued. The back of the sign reads "Drive Carefully" and "Come Back Soon". When seen up close, the circles with the letters of the word "WELCOME" reveal themselves to be
silver dollars.
The sign is currently located in the center island of Las Vegas Boulevard across from the (now closed)
Klondike Hotel & Casino. Some consider the sign to be the "official" southern end of the
Las Vegas Strip. The sign, like most of the strip, sits in the town of
Paradise and is located roughly four miles south of the actual city limits of
Las Vegas. (Such distinctions are usually ignored by residents of the
Las Vegas metropolitan area, who refer to the entire urban region as "Las Vegas".)
With the sign so far away from the city itself, the
Las Vegas City Council erected a ''Welcome to Fabulous Downtown Las Vegas'' sign just within the city limits of the City of Las Vegas, on Las Vegas Boulevard. In 2006, yet another sign, larger yet almost identical to the sign on Las Vegas Boulevard, was erected on the center meridian of Boulder Highway near Harmon Avenue.
The image of the sign is featured on the Nevada
license plate that was issued to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the City of Las Vegas in 2005.
The sign is currently owned by
Young Electric Sign Company which leases it to Clark County, while the design itself is in
public domain.
History

The sign lights up at night.
On
October 4,
1999, the sign went dark for about a month when the company that had been paying the power bill was bought by another company who decided not to pay the power bill. When the problem was discovered, payment of the past due amount, under $60, was made and power was turned back on.
The design of the sign was never
copyrighted; this has resulted in the image being ubiquitous on Las Vegas souvenirs, including smaller versions of the signs that also light up.
On
March 6,
2007,
[1] a replica of the sign, larger than the original, was installed on
Boulder Highway near Harmon Avenue. Like the original, it does not mark the border with Las Vegas; instead, it "represents the understood gateway from the Boulder Highway to Las Vegas." This is according to the
LVCVA.
[2]
References
1. KLAS news broadcast March 6, 2007.
2. ?
External links
★
Daylight photos of the sign, both Front and Back