MGM Grand, Las Vegas — Plenums and Seismic Joints Let Fire Climb 26 Floors
Summary
The MGM Grand Hotel on the Las Vegas Strip suffered the deadliest building fire in Nevada history on the morning of 21 November 1980, when an electrical ground-fault that ignited inside a concealed wall at a first-floor delicatessen killed 85 people and injured more than 600. The fire itself never left the ground floor. What killed the dead was smoke — carbon monoxide and combustion products that rose, almost unobstructed, the full 26 storeys of the tower. The proximate killer was not flame but a comprehensive failure of compartmentation.
This was not a structural collapse. The steel frame stood; the building was gutted at casino level and reopened eight months later. It belongs in the forensic record as the canonical demonstration that a high-rise can be lethal without failing structurally, simply by lacking the barriers that keep a single-floor fire from venting its smoke into every occupied room. Roughly four-fifths of the 85 dead died of smoke inhalation and carbon-monoxide poisoning, almost all on the upper floors between the 16th and 26th storeys, far above the fire.
The casino, restaurants and area of origin had no automatic sprinklers; a vast undivided return-air plenum above the casino let smoke cross the entire ground floor in seconds; and from there it rose through unsealed vertical paths — stairwells, elevator hoistways, impaired HVAC dampers and, most damningly, twelve-inch seismic expansion joints built as continuous open shafts from the plenum to the 26th floor. Investigators catalogued dozens of building-code violations and design flaws, and within a year Nevada had rewritten its codes to mandate retroactive sprinkler retrofit in high-rise hotels. The MGM Grand became the byword for compartmentation breach: proof that the question for a tall building is not only whether it will burn, but where its smoke can go.
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Timeline
The Build: A High-Rise With Nothing to Stop the Smoke
The MGM Grand opened in 1973 as one of the largest hotels in the world: a 26-storey tower over more than 2,000 rooms, atop a sprawling casino and restaurant podium. Structurally a conventional steel and concrete high-rise, it never failed structurally; its defining flaw lay not in the frame but in the absence of the passive and active systems that keep a fire and its smoke confined to the compartment where they begin.
Three design features combined to make the building a chimney. First, the casino, restaurants and back-of-house areas — including The Deli, the area of origin — had no automatic sprinklers, the building being sprinklered only where the 1973 code minimally required. A Clark County inspector had accepted the rationale that a fire in an attended casino would be spotted early and knocked down with extinguishers — reasoning that ignored the case that actually occurred: ignition unseen in a concealed wall space at a lightly occupied early-morning hour.
Second, above the casino sat an enormous undivided return-air plenum, eight to sixteen feet high and covering on the order of 1.3 million square feet — one vast horizontal flue with no fire-rated subdivision, so that once fire and smoke entered through a ceiling air-transfer grille, nothing stood between The Deli and the far side of the casino.
Third, and most consequential for the dead, the vertical fire separation was illusory. The seismic expansion joints — twelve-inch gaps built to accommodate structural movement — had been carried continuously from the casino plenum to the 26th floor as open, unsealed shafts. With stairwells, elevator hoistways and HVAC dampers that could not be relied upon to close, they gave the smoke a code-defeating path to every floor above.
The Failure: A Ground-Floor Fire That Killed at the Roof
The ignition was mundane. A refrigerated pastry case installed at The Deli after construction had its copper refrigerant tubing run against an aluminium electrical conduit; vibration and galvanic action wore through the conduit and the insulation of an ungrounded conductor, setting up a ground-fault inside the concealed west-wall partition. Around 07:07 on 21 November 1980 that fault ignited the combustible material packed into the wall cavity.
What followed was governed by the building's geometry. With no sprinkler to check it, the fire burned out of the wall, swept through the unsprinklered Deli, and entered the casino's return-air plenum through a ceiling grille. In that single undivided volume it propagated as a fireball; survivors and investigators described heavy black smoke crossing the casino and dropping to within a few feet of the floor in well under a minute. The HVAC made matters worse: a plastic pneumatic control line melted early, control of the supply fans was lost, and the fans kept pushing smoke rather than isolating it.
Then the smoke went up. Through the stairwells, the elevator hoistways, the failed HVAC dampers and above all the open seismic joints, combustion products rose the full height of the tower by stack effect. The fire never reached the guest floors; the smoke reached all of them. Of the 85 who died, the large majority were found on the upper floors, clustered between the 16th and 26th storeys — guests overcome far above a fire they may never have seen. Roughly four-fifths died of smoke inhalation and carbon-monoxide poisoning; only a handful died of burns. The lethal agent of a structure fire, this case proved, is not always the flame.
The Reckoning: Dozens of Violations and a Rewritten Code
The post-fire investigation did not reach for the language of misfortune. Investigators identified dozens of building-code violations, design errors, installation defects and unsuitable materials, clustered in the failures of compartmentation that let a contained fire kill at a distance. Each was a known, code-relevant deficiency; none had been corrected, because the building had been permitted at construction and never compelled to retrofit.
The institutional response was rapid and durable. Within a year — reinforced by a second high-rise fire at the Las Vegas Hilton in February 1981 — Nevada rewrote its building and fire codes into some of the most stringent life-safety requirements in the country. Crucially, the new rules were retroactive: existing hotels above 55 feet had to retrofit automatic sprinklers, with smoke detection, alarm, voice-communication and smoke-control provisions added. The lesson the fire wrote into code was the one its dead had paid for: a tall building must be able to keep its smoke where the fire is.
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Contributing Factors
Aftermath
The MGM Grand fire killed 85 people and injured more than 600, including roughly 35 firefighters — the deadliest fire in Nevada history and among the worst hotel fires in the United States. Reinforced by the Las Vegas Hilton fire of February 1981, the disaster drove Nevada to rewrite its building and fire codes into some of the most stringent in the nation, above all by mandating the retroactive retrofit of automatic sprinklers in existing high-rise hotels, along with smoke detection, alarms and smoke control. Las Vegas casinos broadly retrofitted suppression, detection and smoke-control systems in the years that followed, and the rebuilt hotel reopened in July 1981 heavily sprinklered. In the fire-safety literature the MGM Grand became the standing byword for compartmentation breach — the case that proved a high-rise can be deadly without burning down, killed not by collapse but by where its smoke was allowed to travel.
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Lessons
- Sprinkler the area of origin, not just the obvious hazards — a fire that ignites unseen in a concealed space at a quiet hour defeats the assumption that occupants and extinguishers will catch it.
- Treat every large concealed plenum as a horizontal flue and subdivide it with fire-rated barriers, so a single ignition cannot involve the whole floor before anyone can respond.
- Firestop every vertical penetration at every floor — seismic joints, shafts and chases left unsealed from bottom to top carry smoke to the occupants farthest from the fire.
- Design HVAC to isolate, not distribute — without dependable smoke detection and automatic damper closure, the air-handling system delivers the lethal product to every room.
- Revisit and retrofit life-safety systems as the standard advances — a building permitted decades ago is not safe merely because it was once legal, and the time to compel sprinklers is before the fire, not after the inquest. ---
References
- MGM Grand fire Wikipedia
- Lessons from the Past: MGM Grand Fire Firehouse
- How the MGM Grand Fire Changed Fire Codes + Standards Jensen Hughes
- Investigation Report on the MGM Grand Hotel Fire, Las Vegas, Nevada, November 21, 1980 NFPA (Investigation Report)
- The Deadliest Fires in U.S. History: The MGM Grand Fire in Las Vegas QRFS