The Story
By the late 1990s, Las Vegas casinos had discovered that a spectacular golf course could be as persuasive as any suite or show, and the arms race was on. Cascata was the escalation: a Rees Jones design blasted and sculpted into a barren canyon of the River Mountains above Boulder City, a short drive from Hoover Dam. Reported construction costs ran anywhere from fifty to seventy million dollars — whichever number you believe, it stood among the most expensive golf courses ever built when it opened in 2000.
The name is Italian for 'waterfall,' and Cascata does not use the word loosely. A 418-foot waterfall spills down the mountainside above the course, feeding a stream that flows straight through the lobby of the 37,000-square-foot Tuscan-style clubhouse before continuing out into the desert. Jones called his finished work 'the eighth wonder of the golf world'; Sports Illustrated, more quietly, called it 'golf's hidden treasure.' Both were reacting to the same trick — lush green fairways climbing through raw desert canyon, each hole feeling like it has the mountains to itself.
For years Cascata was effectively invitation-only, reserved for the casino's biggest players — a course more whispered about than photographed. Today it takes public tee times, and the experience remains what it was designed to be: thirty minutes from the Strip, a world away from it. You play in canyon silence, the waterfall glinting above, and you understand why the high rollers kept this one to themselves.