There are a few Las Vegas restaurants that closed and shattered our hearts when they went out of business.
It’s just simply a sad scene to see anything go out of business. But, a once-lively bar or a bustling restaurant, whose corridors use to echo laughter and where the clanging of pots and pans were the main soundtrack, going completely dark. Well, that’s just heartbreaking.
I remember the first time I saw this. My mother use to work at a successful Japanese restaurant in Metro Detroit. For a few years, it was nearly impossible to get a reservation. People from all sides of the city would flock to try the coveted sushi, the crisp tempura and the warm udon noodles. The staff was like family, and the ship was strong for a few years.
However once the Great Recession of 2008 hit, the business started to decline. My mother eventually left the restaurant and started a new job. We visited the former “neighborhood-claimed” five-star restaurant. But, the restaurant was a shell of what I remembered. There is a plethora of reasons why a business fails. No matter what, it’s still sad.
The Restaurant Business Is Tough — Especially In Las Vegas
Some of the toughest people were bred from the front-lines of the kitchen, grueling bar-back work and dealing with hungry, angry people. The restaurant gig is a tough industry that requires business sense, creativity, good taste and other facets of the human condition.
According to the National Restaurant Association, 30% of restaurants fail in their first year. And it’s no doubt that the pandemic changed the supply chain of food, the labor pool and so much more. Plus to start a restaurant, you need a lot of capital — aka money.
But, when the business is successful, you foster memories, great food that connects people and hopefully you get some money back tenfold.
We send our regards to the restaurants that didn’t survive in 2023. Thank you for being part of the Las Vegas restaurants scene. Scroll down below to see what eateries shuttered their doors in 2023.