Las Vegas’ Eastside Cannery Meets the Wrecking Ball After Pandemic Closure

By Matthias Binder
Shuttered Las Vegas casino is being demolished (Featured Image)

Demolition Dust Settles on a Gaming Relic (Image Credits: Pixabay)

Las Vegas – Heavy machinery rumbles across a 29.5-acre site on Boulder Highway, where the once-bustling Eastside Cannery hotel-casino now yields to demolition crews.[1]

Demolition Dust Settles on a Gaming Relic

The spectacle of a casino crumbling marks a familiar chapter in Las Vegas history, but the Eastside Cannery’s fate underscores post-pandemic realities. Work crews obtained a $7.5 million demolition permit from Clark County in October 2025, and by early February 2026, piles of rubble dotted the property.[1] The 300-room hotel tower stood gutted, its windows stripped away, revealing empty interiors to passersby on the 5000 block of Boulder Highway.[1]

This Boulder Strip property, at the corner of Boulder Highway and Harmon Avenue, catered to locals with its 64,000-square-foot casino floor, multiple bars, restaurants, and a 250-seat entertainment lounge. The demolition process highlighted the site’s vast scale, including 20,000 square feet of meeting and ballroom space that once hosted events.

From 2008 Opening to 2020 Shutdown

Eastside Cannery debuted in 2008 as a mid-tier destination on the eastern edge of the Las Vegas Valley. Boyd Gaming Corp. acquired it in 2016, along with the Cannery in North Las Vegas, for roughly $230 million.[2] The purchase solidified Boyd’s presence in the locals’ market, though business increasingly gravitated toward the nearby Sam’s Town casino, just a half-mile away.

The COVID-19 pandemic delivered the final blow. Nevada Governor Steve Sisolak ordered nonessential businesses, including casinos, to close in March 2020. While many properties reopened in June, Eastside Cannery stayed dark due to weak demand.[1] It became the last Las Vegas casino shuttered by the crisis that never resumed operations.

Boyd Gaming Charts a New Course

In October 2025, Boyd Gaming confirmed the property’s end. Spokesman David Strow explained the rationale: “It has been more than five years since we closed Eastside Cannery, and there is not sufficient market demand to reopen the facility. Given this, we are finalizing plans to demolish the building.”[2][3] The company had purchased the underlying land for $45 million in February 2025, transitioning from a lease arrangement.[1]

Boyd operates 10 casinos in Southern Nevada, and the decision reflected broader trends. Nearby competitors like Red Rock Resorts sold and demolished three properties post-pandemic, while another in Laughlin remained closed.[2]

Residential Horizons for the Boulder Strip Site

Discussions advanced to repurpose the cleared land for residential development, aligning with Las Vegas’ housing needs. Fencing encircled the site shortly after the announcement, signaling swift action.[2] No timeline emerged for construction, and Boyd offered few updates on the hotel tower’s implosion as of February 2026.

The shift from gaming to housing mirrored evolving demands on the Boulder Strip, a corridor long dominated by locals-oriented casinos. Here are key features of the former Eastside Cannery:

  • Over 300 hotel rooms across multiple floors.
  • 64,000 square feet of gaming space.
  • 16th-floor private club and special events ballroom.
  • Proximity to Sam’s Town, drawing away patrons.
  • 29.5-acre footprint primed for redevelopment.

Key Takeaways

  • Eastside Cannery closed in 2020 and never recovered amid low demand.
  • Demolition permit issued October 2025; work ongoing in 2026.
  • Site eyed for residential use, ending its gaming chapter.

As the dust clears on Boulder Highway, the Eastside Cannery’s demolition closes a chapter on pandemic-era losses while hinting at residential renewal. What future do you envision for this prime Las Vegas parcel? Share your thoughts in the comments.

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