Posted on: April 24, 2026, 02:52h.
Last updated on: April 24, 2026, 02:59h.
- Clark County officials are struggling to fix Strip escalators due to a shortage of parts from defunct manufacturers
- Outdoor escalators installed in 1995 were never designed for the 24/7 operation and extreme desert heat of Las Vegas
- Broken infrastructure is forcing tourists, particularly those with mobility issues, into long detours through casinos
What goes up must break down — and if we’re talking escalators on the Las Vegas Strip, they stay that way for a long time. There isn’t a day on the Strip anymore when several pedestrian-bridge escalators aren’t blocked off.

The machines face the same hurdles they always have — routine monthly and annual inspections, drunk knuckleheads pressing the emergency stop button, and the tolls taken by wear and tear, extreme heat, and vandalism.
But one frustrating new problem is keeping them offline longer than ever.
“Why can we build a Sphere covered in 1.2 million LEDs that looks like a giant eyeball … but we cannot keep a moving staircase moving?” as the YouTube channel Metal Playgrounds recently asked.

The issue isn’t a lack of funding. Despite the downturn in tourism, hotel room taxes continue to adequately fund infrastructure repairs along the resort corridor.
The culprit is a critical scarcity of specialized parts.
Most of the Strip’s escalators and elevators are the same units that debuted along with the pedestrian bridges 30 years ago.
“One of the hotels will complain that our escalators are down, and we say, ‘Yeah, they are, but we ordered the part three months ago from Germany (because) the company doesn’t exist anymore,’” Clark County Commissioner Tick Segerblom said during a commission meeting this week, according to KSNV-TV/Las Vegas.
Elevated Las Vegas
The Las Vegas Strip had no outdoor escalators before 1995. Until then, people crossed its busy intersections with its walk signs and hoped for the best. As traffic volume soared and pedestrian fatalities rose at major intersection, the county moved the crowds 20 feet overhead.

The problem? Escalators were designed for 12-hour shifts in climate-controlled shopping malls, not to to operate 24/7 in the brutal heat, dust and constantly spilling daiquiris of the Strip. So Las Vegas’ escalators break down significantly more often than the ones at Macy’s.
Today, when several units close for up to three months waiting for specialty parts, it creates a cascade of failure that makes the entire system seem broken.
Visitors at the recent County Commission meeting noted that these outages force them to regularly reroute through smoky casinos or climb massive flights of stairs — a major barrier for older guests and those with mobility issues. (The elevators, located directly beneath the bridges, suffer from the same mechanical shutdowns as the escalators.)
“It’s just one of those things where, over time, things just became outdated,” Segerblom admitted, while pledging to prioritize the required repairs.