A five-room adobe hotel was built in the Mexican Territorial style in 1910. The town also has a general store, a trading post, the Whistle Stop Cafe, an RV park, five eco-cabins, and ten sites with teepees on them. There is also a historic schoolhouse and art exhibits connected to the Burning Man event. (Source: Wikipedia)
I'm guessing that eco-cabins means no plumbing and heat.* And Burning Man? That just layers weird onto bleak.
Not much to commend this tumbleweedy ghost town to this ardent urbanite.
Over the years, there have been a couple of attempts to turn the town into something or other. One buyer - and, yes, you can buy little unincorporated no service towns like this - had plans to make Nipton a solar energy testing ground. Another hoped to built it into a "weed-themed resort." Too bad marijuana sales weren't allowed there.Enter Ross Mollison, an Australian impresario whose company, Spiegelworld, runs flash shows in Las Vegas - Absinthe at Caesar's Palace (which I take is a raunchy Cirque de Soleil) and the Atomic Saloon (featuring sexy acrobats) at The Venetian. Plus Superfrico, which bills itself as a psychedelic Italian American restaurant. Funny mushroom stuffed raviolis?
I'm exhausted at the idea of these shows. And Superfrico? Mamma Mia!
Despite the lack of patronage from those of my ilk, I guess Spiegelworld does okay for itself, because last year Mollison went ahead and bought Nipton for $2.5 million.
His intention? Make Nipton:
...a retreat for circus performers to workshop new acts and a luxury attraction for tourists who could stop there on the way to Las Vegas.
“I’m not approaching it like a developer. I want Nipton to look like it does now, but more beautified, with a globally significant, interesting restaurant that is somewhere between Francis Mallmann and the French Laundry,” [Mollison] said, referencing well-known restaurateurs as he described plans for multiple eateries, a hotel, solar panels and a runway for small planes, all with a big top twist. “Maybe we stick a trapeze in the middle, or a high wire that’s 1,000 feet off the ground. Or is that too P.T. Barnum?”(Source: NY Times)
Mollison intends to plow about $20 million into Nipton to make it look like it does now - keep the stars, the mountains, and the chollas - while also making it not look like it does now (rusty, rundown, dreary, bleak).
Part of Mollison's reno work involves preserving that Burning Man art, including:
Perpetual Consumption, a 26-foot-high sculpture by Clayton Blake in which stacked shopping carts form loop-the-loops meant to symbolize American consumerism.
What if an audacious circus company purchased a small town in the middle of the Mojave Desert? A living town where performers and artisans can retreat to dream and create? A place to tell stories around the campfire? A place to dine under the stars and wake up to a panoramic view of the mountains? (Source: Spiegelworld)
So, on the one hand, there's the globally significant restaurant. On the other hand, a simple campfire-y place where creatives can spin their yarns and get inspired by the stars and the mountain panorama.
As new caretakers of this circus-oasis in the desert, Spiegelworld will be writing the next chapter of Nipton’s centuries-old story. Will you be in it? We can’t wait to see what happens next.
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