Walking through a field of dead signs has a subtle, unsettling quality. The letters are massive, their glass tubes cracked or missing completely, and their edges are rusted. Some still have names you only vaguely recognize, such as casinos that are now only visible in old photos and the recollections of people who drove down the Strip in the 1970s and believed it would last forever, and hotels that collapsed years ago. It is difficult to avoid feeling as though you are in the middle of a cemetery and a museum when you are standing in the Neon Boneyard in Las Vegas.
The point is exactly that tension. The Neon Museum started as something much less glamorous: a city council vote in 1996, a meager $150,000 in redevelopment funds, and a hazy consensus that these rusting giants deserved better than a landfill. Today, it attracts about 200,000 visitors annually and turned away 30,000 in 2023 alone due to sold-out tours. Young Electric Sign Company was getting ready to close its storage lot. For decades, the company had produced a large portion of Las Vegas’s neon identity. The signs had to go somewhere. Apparently, enough people didn’t like the idea of just discarding them that a museum was created in their place.

What transpired next reveals an intriguing aspect of how societies determine what art is worthy of preservation. When they were created, the majority of those signs were never regarded as works of art. They were designed to divert drivers from the road and through a casino door. Advertisements as direct and transactional as anything created by a marketing department included the Stardust sign, the Moulin Rouge lettering, and the horse-mounted cowboy of the Hacienda. Their goal was always relevance, and as soon as they lost it, they were deemed disposable.
It’s important to consider whether preservation would have occurred at all in the absence of a geographical accident. The amount of displaced signage is exceptionally high because Las Vegas is rebuilding and destroying itself at a rate that most cities would find concerning. There was pressure due to the sheer volume. There was just too much to overlook. Some cities gradually lose their visual heritage, piece by piece, and no one is aware of it until it is completely gone. Someone winced when Las Vegas suddenly lost it all.
Instead of using only archival materials, the Neon Museum used curatorial methods. The boneyard is an intentional outdoor exhibit, not a warehouse, with signs arranged to allow guided tours to navigate through them like chapters in a book. Some have been repaired and reenergized; in 2023, the Lido de Paris sign was re-lit across from the Stardust sign, which had previously been its neighbor. A storage lot could never feel as purposeful as that pairing.
However, only about 25% of the collection is on exhibit. In off-site facilities, hundreds of signs are still waiting for a space that might never be available. In 2024, the museum declared its intention to move to a larger location in the Las Vegas Arts District. However, in 2025, the plans changed once more, and three other downtown locations are currently being considered. The infrastructure for preservation seems to constantly lag behind the desire for it.
The majority of art vanishes in that space between what is preserved and what is actually viewed. Due to their size, uniqueness, and connection to a mythical city, Las Vegas’ neon signs have endured. The majority of commercial art isn’t as fortunate. It gradually becomes unrecognizable as it fades, gets painted over, and ends up in a container unit on the outskirts of somewhere. Despite its gloomy atmosphere, the boneyard symbolizes a lucky result. It is unable to account for everything that was never allowed to pass through the gate.
FAQ’s
1. What is the Neon Museum in Las Vegas?
It’s a nonprofit museum preserving decommissioned neon signs from old casinos and businesses.
2. How did the Neon Museum begin?
A 1996 city council vote allocated $150,000 to save Las Vegas’s discarded neon signs.
3. Why are most neon signs considered art only after retirement?
They were built as commercial advertisements, not art — relevance defined their original purpose.
4. How many visitors does the Neon Museum receive annually?
Around 200,000 visitors per year, with 30,000 turned away in 2023 alone.
5. What happens to the signs the museum can’t display?
Hundreds remain in off-site storage, waiting for space that may never arrive.
