Las Vegas is defined by mega-resorts that combine casinos, hotels, theaters, restaurants, and convention space under one roof, running 24 hours a day with enormous, constantly changing guest populations. Few building types are harder to evacuate than a windowless casino floor designed to keep visitors inside and unaware of time.
Nevada operates its own state OSHA plan, so Las Vegas employers follow Nevada OSHA standards, including Emergency Action Plan requirements, with the Clark County Fire Department and Las Vegas Fire & Rescue enforcing local fire codes. The region's fire codes have been notably strict since the 1980 MGM Grand fire reshaped hotel life-safety expectations.
Add extreme desert heat to the round-the-clock occupancy and assembly planning gets harder. OSHAMap builds a posting-ready evacuation map straight from your floor plan, with exits, routes, and assembly points included, for a Strip resort or a convention venue in minutes.