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Off-Strip Workspace Near the Las Vegas Convention Center

·June 8, 2026·4 min read
Off-Strip Workspace Near the Las Vegas Convention Center

If you've ever tried to take a client call from a Strip hotel lobby during a Las Vegas convention, you know the problem. The background noise, the unreliable WiFi, the paid parking, the business center that hasn't been refreshed in years — none of it works when you're trying to run a real business day between sessions.

Las Vegas hosts roughly 24,000 meetings and conventions a year, according to the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, and about 6 million people travel there annually for conventions, trade shows, and meetings. During a major show — CES, SEMA, NAB, or any of the dozens of large conventions — every on-Strip workspace option goes from merely bad to genuinely unusable. Hotel lobbies turn into standing-room-only work floors. Business centers get lines. The convention center's own work areas fill within minutes.

There's a better option a short drive from the action.

Where Muze Office sits

Muze Office is at 6860 Bermuda Rd, Suite 200, Las Vegas, NV 89119 — off-Strip in the Paradise / South Las Vegas business corridor, just off I-215. It's about 10 minutes from Harry Reid International Airport and roughly 10 to 15 minutes from the Las Vegas Convention Center (LVCC), which sits near Paradise Rd and Convention Center Dr. It's a purpose-built coworking space with real desks, private meeting rooms, phone booths, fast WiFi, an on-site Muze Cafe serving hot meals, and free on-site parking.

That last point matters more than most people realize until they've paid for valet at a Strip hotel for a two-hour meeting.

Why off-Strip beats the alternatives

Hotel lobbies and business centers

During convention week, every Strip hotel lobby becomes an unofficial coworking space — minus the desks, outlets, privacy, and quiet. Business centers aren't much better: aging computers, slow printers, per-page charges, and a queue for the one open workstation.

At Muze Office, you walk in, sit at a real desk, connect to high-speed WiFi, and start working. You're not competing with tens of thousands of attendees for bandwidth.

Convention center work areas

Most shows set up temporary work lounges — rows of tables near the meeting rooms. During smaller events these work fine. During CES, SEMA, NAB, or any major show, they're packed before 9 a.m. and the WiFi is shared with the entire floor.

Muze Office is off the convention corridor entirely, so it doesn't fill up during show week. You're not on the attendee walking path.

Airport lounges

Lounges at Harry Reid International are built for travelers killing time, not for running a business day. The seating is lounge furniture, the WiFi is shared, and private calls are tough when gate announcements interrupt every couple of minutes. A Muze Office day pass starts at $25 and gives you a real workspace, biometric access, and a desk you can actually focus at.

What's available during a show

  • Day Pass — from $25/day. Open desk, high-speed WiFi, coffee, phone booths, and free parking. No long-term commitment.
  • Meeting and conference rooms — by the hour. Huddle rooms start at $25/hour, with larger conference and board-style rooms available. All include AV and video conferencing.
  • Private offices. For 1 to 10 people when you need a lockable base for the week instead of a shared desk. Month-to-month, no long-term lease.
  • Event space — from $99/hr. Flexible layouts, full AV, and on-site catering with no food-and-beverage minimum, if you're hosting a side meeting, demo, or reception away from the show floor.

Getting here from the convention center

The LVCC is near Paradise Rd and Convention Center Dr, east of the Strip.

  • Drive: Head to I-215 and exit near Bermuda Rd — about 10 to 15 minutes in normal traffic.
  • Rideshare: A short, predictable trip, though fares climb with convention-week surge pricing.
  • Parking: Free at Muze Office. No validation, no meters, no garage fees.

When off-Strip workspace pays off

The highest-value reasons to step away from the show floor during a Las Vegas convention:

  1. Private client or investor meetings that need a real conference room, not a hotel hallway
  2. Team standups where 4 to 6 people debrief the day's leads and plan tomorrow
  3. Follow-up work — emails, proposals, order processing — that requires focus and a real desk
  4. Calls and video meetings with your home office or clients who aren't at the show
  5. Prep work for the next day's presentations, demos, or pitches
  6. Contract and deal review that needs privacy and a printer

Ready to try it?

Whether you're in town for NAB, SEMA, a meeting near CES, or any of the dozens of annual conventions in Las Vegas, Muze Office is a short drive from the action with none of the Strip chaos. See the full list of convention coworking options, or book a tour and walk the space before your next show.

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