The leather-lined hallways and marbled rooms in the mansions of Caesars Palace exude opulence. And every guest can experience amenities — like an exotic aquarium, pool, and personal theater — for $30,000 a night.
Take the Titus Villa, one of the hotel’s 25 villas in Las Vegas. The approximately 11,200 square meter area is about 20 times the size of an average 650 square meter hotel room. It consists of three rooms, three and a half bathrooms, an eight-person media room, and a 33.5-foot pool.
The mansion has hosted some of the “most powerful and influential people alive” – including Barack Obama, Lizzo, Bill Clinton, Aretha Franklin, Bradley Cooper, Justin Bieber, Usher and Cher — according to Caesars Entertainment Regional President Sean McBurney.
“If you look at the super-rich … they want to travel with the same luxuries that they have at home,” McBurney tells CNBC’s Make it. “They have their private jets. They have these huge houses. And then staying in a … hotel room or even a standard two-bedroom suite – it doesn’t suit their lifestyle.”
And the amenities don’t end at the villa’s perimeter.
Luxury from the inside out
Upon arrival at Titus Villa, guests are escorted to a private valet entrance and greeted by the hotel’s 24-hour butler service, consisting of a rotating cast of 65 butlers.
When you enter the villa, one of the first rooms you see is the dining room, which can seat up to 10 people – although the villa doesn’t actually have a kitchen. A large culinary team is available for made-to-order orders, but guests often choose to have food delivered from their favorite Las Vegas restaurants instead.
Titus Villa’s 10 meter long outdoor pool is covered by a retractable roof and is accompanied by a nearby dining area.
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“We want you to feel at home,” says McBurney, adding that the staff speaks several different languages with all 65 butlers. “That means you [can] have whatever your authentic food is. We have a large culinary team that can prepare anything you desire.”
Beneath the 20 foot high coffered barrel vaulted ceilings, a long corridor leads to the living room, which features two seating areas and a self-playing piano. McBurney says some guests — like the band members of Imagine Dragons — ignore the piano’s auto-play feature and choose to play the instrument themselves.
A stay at the villa includes 24-hour butler service. Butlers often venture off-campus to inquire about guests’ meal or decor requests.
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Adjoining the billiard room, the bar is stocked according to guests’ preferences – whether it’s tea, whiskey, champagne or something else entirely. And the media room, which contains a home theater and massage chairs, is conspicuously lavish with its silk-lined walls.
But it still doesn’t match the master bedroom, which includes an eight-by-eight-foot bed, steam shower, and soaking tub made of “rocks imported from around the world,” says McBurney.
An A-list guest book
Most of the villa’s high-profile guests have written personal messages in the property’s guest book: Cher, for example, once wrote in the book: “Caesars, you are the first hotel I have played in alone and will be the last. Thank you for everything over the years,” McBurney said.
Outside of the guest book, McBurney says his lips are sealed when it comes to stories about the Titus mansion’s most famous visitors. “There’s a need for restraint in this business, and privacy is of the utmost importance to these customers,” he says.
The bar next to the billiard room is stocked according to guests’ preferences.
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However, if you can afford to pay $30,000 a night, you can join them. Some guests, says McBurney, only stay one night. Others stay for weeks, alone or with family and friends. McBurney also says high-rolling players are offered free stays if they wager what he only describes as a “reasonable amount” of money.
The villa is designed to meet a guest’s needs so completely that they never have to leave if they don’t want to. The idea, says McBurney, is to offer guests luxury without having to deal with the casino or the rest of the city.
“You literally never have to leave this mansion to have an exceptional time in Las Vegas at Caesar’s Palace,” he says.
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