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Country superstar taking over historic Las Vegas Strip venue
For nearly eight decades, the Flamingo Las Vegas has embodied the glitz, risk, and reinvention that define the Las Vegas Strip.
The Flamingo also has a more storied history than most other Las Vegas Strip resorts.
Opened in 1946 by mobster Bugsy Siegel, it was the first true resort-casino on Las Vegas Boulevard (Siegel allegedly so feared for his life that his personal suite had concrete walls that were four feet thick).
The iconic hotel has had a starring role in movies like “Viva Las Vegas” and “Ocean’s 11,” and been the home for dozens of music residencies, like Donnie and Marie Osmond’s 1,730 show run.
Now the Flamingo is ready for another reinvention: a country-music-powered transformation led by Luke Combs, one of the genre’s biggest global stars.
Combs will open a 34,000-square-foot entertainment complex on the site formerly home to Margaritaville at the Flamingo, according to The Las Vegas Review-Journal.
The new venture, called Category 10, will combine a live-music hall, rooftop bar, and immersive nightlife space.
The name nods to Combs’ breakout hit “Hurricane,” and the design aims to channel that same high-energy storm.
Backed by Ryman Hospitality Properties and its Opry Entertainment Group, the venue will debut in fall 2026 in partnership with Caesars Entertainment, which operates the Flamingo.
I’m stoked about bringing this to Las Vegas— it takes everything I love about live music to the next level.
The Flamingo’s reboot arrives during one of the Strip’s most turbulent economic cycles.
Visitor volumes remain shy of their pre-pandemic highs: According to the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority (LVCVA), the city hosted 41.7 million visitors in 2024, still below the 42.5 million who came in 2019.
So far, visitor numbers are down in 2025, but room rates are up, and spending patterns have shifted toward entertainment and dining over gaming.
Related: Las Vegas Strip casino venue declares Chapter 11 bankruptcy
The Flamingo’s long-running Margaritaville closed in 2024, following other high-profile shake-ups like the closure of Mirage’s iconic volcano attraction and several restaurant turnovers at Bellagio and Luxor.
But things could be turning around.
“The success of Blake Shelton’s Ole Red Las Vegas location has paved the way for Luke Combs’ Category 10 and many more country nightclubs to open on the Strip,” says Kirk O’Neil, TheStreet’s Las Vegas expert.
Plans for Category 10 outline a four-level venue designed to blend honky-tonk energy with Las Vegas spectacle: