An aerial view of a suburban neighborhood with a central park surrounded by houses and streets.

The Comeback of Huntridge Park

Huntridge Park was once the heart of Las Vegas’s first planned neighborhood — a place where community thrived. Today, it stands locked and silent. We’re here to change that.

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Aerial view of a residential neighborhood with houses, streets, and open fields in a rural area.

Our Neighborhood's History

In 1957, Las Vegas families moved into Huntridge—one of the city's first planned neighborhoods with tree-lined streets, generous lots, and front porches where neighbors knew each other. At the center sat Huntridge Circle Park, built as the community's gathering place where children played, families picnicked, and neighbors connected.

For decades, it served exactly that purpose as the heart of Las Vegas's first tract subdivision. The city even invested $1.5 million in the early 2000s to add an amphitheater, community garden, jogging path, and children's play areas.

Where We Stand Today

Today, that same park sits empty and boarded up, locked away from the community it was built to serve. This is the third closure since 2000. The challenges are real: safety concerns, past management failures, and a community divided about whether reopening is worth the risk.

But here's what we know: doing nothing isn't working, and meanwhile, major development is happening all around us.

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