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Hotel's 'death ray' burns Las Vegas sunbathers

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Barangaroo needs this 'death ray' to burn East Balmain NIMBYs.

Hotel's 'death ray' burns Las Vegas sunbathers



MGM Resorts International is taking the heat for an intense beam of searing desert sunlight, jokingly dubbed the "death ray", that some hotel guests say poses a risk of severe burns to bathers lounging poolside.

The beam is actually a concentrated reflection of solar rays bouncing off the gleaming glass facade of the concave-shaped, high-rise Vdara hotel and condominium, which opened on the Las Vegas "strip" in December.

Local media, as well as some hotel staff and guests, have come to refer to the reflection as the "death ray", but MGM Resorts officials prefer to call it a "solar convergence phenomenon".

"The refraction moves across the pool deck over a period of 90 minutes," company spokesman Gordon Absher said. "It's never in the same place from day to day or week to week because the sun is changing its elevation in the sky."

MGM Resorts, which owns the property, has sought to correct the problem by installing a high-tech solar film over each of the 3000 glass panes covering the south facade of the Vdara to scatter the rays.

But the concentrated sunlight remains hot enough at certain times, in certain spots, to melt plastic and singe hair, said William Pintas, 49, a Chicago lawyer and Vdara condo owner who first encountered the effect after a dip in the pool.

When his head started burning, he thought it was from chemicals in the pool.

"So I just lay down in the chair, and that's when my back and the back of my legs started burning, and I ran under a nearby umbrella. And I'm under the umbrella and there is no shading from the light or heat," he recounted. "It was the strangest thing."

Pintas said he could even smell his hair starting to burn.

Astonished and angry, he alerted hotel staff, then called the local newspaper to draw attention to the problem.

Absher said MGM Resorts was "now looking into further mitigation procedures", including more umbrellas, additional foliage or shade structures.

He said not everyone had complained. On cooler days, he said, he had seen sunbathers deliberately lay their blankets on the convergence spot for additional warmth.

But Pintas said he worried that, sooner or later, someone would be seriously burned if they fell asleep in the path of the ray, even if under an umbrella, because, as he found, the concentrated light could penetrate the shade.

"In Vegas, people are out drinking the night before, so it's not hard to imagine people being unconscious there under an umbrella," he said.
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:lol: before i saw the picture and read the article I thought there was an actual tube or something which was stuck on top the building and projected rays of light onto people who went outside the hotel..


Perhaps the swimming pool should have been built between the two buildings and light could still go onto the bathers???
All these wouldn't have happened to these guests had they stayed in East Perth.
Funny how the picture is from Google Earth, cheappp!

also, Dilaz I agree.. sunscreen!!
And if you feel yourself getting a little to burnt, MOVE!
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There's another news article about the same story here, the pic isn't cheap but it doesn't show how the bldg is reflective....



Source

here's another pic of that same hotel. At night :)


Source
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There's one of these death rays in Sydney. The Sheraton Four Points is concaved and concentrates the afternoon sun on a single point on the walking/cycling bridge that links King St to Pyrmont Bridge. It's only a couple of metres where it hits but it is so hot you've got to pick up speed through it to make it out the other side. Seriously.
What time roughly would this happen on the footbridge? You think with the strict overshadowing policy that this wouldn't.
Mid to late afternoon on bright and warm summers day. It's got nothing to do with overshadowing, we are talking rays of light here.
There's one of these death rays in Sydney. The Sheraton Four Points is concaved and concentrates the afternoon sun on a single point on the walking/cycling bridge that links King St to Pyrmont Bridge. It's only a couple of metres where it hits but it is so hot you've got to pick up speed through it to make it out the other side. Seriously.
cheap tanning salon?
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Mandalay Bay is no different. Concentrated light from the gold clad tower does provide more light over the pool areas just like this one. I never found it to be a great problem even in 40 degree dry heat. These people are whingey losers that need to get a grip and take control of their lives.

It's not quite as bad as there are more angles...



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