
There’s a Las Vegas That Has Nothing to Do With the Strip
June 7, 2026
A View of the Strip and the Sphere for Under $250K
June 10, 2026TENNIS ANYONE? Las Vegas High-Rise Condos With Tennis Courts - A Complete Insider's Guide
By Shari Sanderson, Michelle Manley & Kristine Murray | Award Realty | License#S.0067305
Over 5,000 Las Vegas Condos Sold | $1 Billion+ in Sales
So you play tennis. And you’re thinking about buying a high-rise condo in Las Vegas. And somewhere in the back of your mind you’re wondering — am I going to have to give up my game to live in a high-rise?
The answer is no. But if you’re searching for Las Vegas high-rise condos with tennis courts, your options are more specific than you might think — and knowing the difference between them matters.
I’ve spent over 20 years in the Las Vegas luxury condo market. I know these buildings. I know what it actually feels like to live in them, what the lobbies smell like at 7am, who’s in the elevator, what residents complain about and what they brag about. And when it comes to tennis — a real court, on your property, that you can use whenever you want — there are really only a handful of places in Las Vegas that deliver it at a luxury high-rise level.
Here’s the honest rundown on all of them.
Turnberry Place — The One With the Clay Courts
Paradise Road, just off the Las Vegas Strip
Turnberry Place is the only luxury residential high-rise community in Las Vegas with clay tennis courts — and not just any clay courts. Har-Tru. Four of them. With a resident pro who has been there for over two decades.
That pro is Marty Hennessy. He is a Las Vegas legend in the truest sense of the word — and I say that as someone who took tennis lessons from him myself, back when he was at the Desert Inn. He started directing junior tennis camps in 1973. He spent roughly 27 years as Tennis Director at the Desert Inn — back when the Desert Inn was the address in this city, the place where Howard Hughes locked himself in the penthouse and Frank Sinatra had the run of the property.
Carolyn Goodman, who went on to become Mayor of Las Vegas, played tennis with Marty when he was at the Desert Inn. Tony Bennett — who called Marty his best friend at the Nevada Tennis Hall of Fame — was in his orbit for years. Rita Rudner’s daughter took her very first tennis lesson with Marty, right there at Turnberry Place, with a foam racquet in 2004.
That’s the kind of history attached to these courts. It’s not a gym with a tennis backdrop painted on the wall. It’s a real program, with real lineage, run by someone who has been at the center of Las Vegas tennis culture for half a century. When you take a lesson from Marty Hennessy at Turnberry Place, you’re part of that lineage.
Now. About the clay. If you’ve ever played on Har-Tru, you know why it matters. The ball slows down. Points get longer. Strategy beats power. And your knees thank you the next morning. Hard courts are everywhere. Clay courts at a residential high-rise in Las Vegas? There is nowhere else to get this.
The Community Itself
Turnberry Place was the first real luxury high-rise community ever built in Las Vegas. Before Veer, before the Waldorf, before any of it — this is where it started. The developer was Jeffrey Soffer of Turnberry Associates, who brought his family’s ‘mansions in the sky’ concept from South Florida to the Nevada desert. Four towers, all guard-gated, on about 15 acres just two blocks east of the Strip on Paradise Road.
The way it’s laid out when you pull through the gate: Tower Two is the first building on your left, with Tower One behind it near the parking structure. On your right, Tower Four greets you first, with Tower Three positioned at the back. And right in the center of all four towers — the Stirling Club.
The Stirling Club is the reason Turnberry Place residents rarely leave the property when they don’t have to. It’s a private club — residents only — with a spa, dining, a cigar lounge, a full fitness operation, resort pools, and of course the tennis courts. It recently went through a significant renovation and came back better. If you’ve ever belonged to a genuinely great private club and wondered what it would be like to have that built into your home address, Turnberry Place is your answer.
The neighborhood context here is worth understanding. You’re not on the Strip. You’re two blocks east of it, which means you’re in the corridor between the Wynn/Encore to your west and the Las Vegas Convention Center directly across the street. Resorts World and the Fontainebleau are your northern neighbors. It’s a multi-billion dollar neighborhood — and Turnberry Place sits in the middle of it, completely unbothered by all of it behind its gate.
The Fontainebleau Connection
Speaking of the Fontainebleau — this is one of the great Las Vegas real estate stories and it’s directly connected to Turnberry Place.
Jeffrey Soffer, the same developer who built Turnberry Place, announced plans in 2005 to build the Fontainebleau Las Vegas on the property directly adjacent to Turnberry. Construction started in 2007. The tower climbed to 737 feet. Then 2008 happened. The financial crisis killed the financing, the project went bankrupt in 2009 at roughly 70 percent complete, and for over a decade that unfinished tower stood on the north Strip as the most visible symbol of the crash. Turnberry Place residents could see it from their balconies every single day.
Then Soffer came back. In 2021, his Fontainebleau Development reacquired the property and restarted construction. On December 13, 2023, the Fontainebleau Las Vegas opened — 67 stories, one of the largest buildings in Nevada, built by the same man who built Turnberry Place. He said it best himself: “Built for 2023, not 2009.”
That’s your neighbor. Built by the guy who built your building. That’s not a coincidence — it’s a legacy.
A Note to Jeffrey Soffer
The original vision for the Fontainebleau Las Vegas included just over 1,000 condo hotels inside the tower. That hasn’t come to fruition — at least not yet.
“Mr. Soffer, if you’re reading this — we’re the ones who sold out the Waldorf Astoria Residences (formerly the Mandarin Oriental Private Residences), sold out Veer Towers, put the bulk together for Turnberry Towers, sold bulk at Panorama Towers, The Martin, Juhl, The Ogden — and the list goes on. We’ve been part of many of the most significant high-rise developments this city has ever seen. We even sold out the Loft 5 for $50 million — and yes, we know that one’s a little different from the rest of the list, but that’s kind of the point. If you’re ever ready to move those condo hotels, contact me or my partner Michelle Manley directly. Shari Sanderson — 702-287-4290.”
Turnberry Towers — Same Family, Different Vibe
Karen Avenue, just off the Las Vegas Strip
Turnberry Towers offers two on-site tennis courts in a guard-gated Las Vegas high-rise setting, paired with one of the most resort-like pool environments in the city. Same developer, different DNA.
Where Turnberry Place feels like a classic private estate, Turnberry Towers feels like a resort. The pool situation alone — a dramatic waterfall feature with grottos and lush tropical landscaping — is the kind of thing that makes people reconsider their priorities. Residents talk about that pool the way hotel guests talk about a great beach.
There are two tennis courts on the property, positioned closer to the West Tower. They’re hard courts, well lit, well maintained. No resident pro, no clay, no organized program — but if you want a court available whenever you feel like playing, they’re right there.
What Turnberry Towers does exceptionally well is the day-to-day living experience. The lobby has an energy that feels genuinely welcoming — coffee all day, a concierge and valet team that residents consistently praise, and a community atmosphere that’s more social and lively than the quieter, more private feel of Turnberry Place. The dog parks are legitimately great. The BBQ areas get used. People actually know each other here.
If Turnberry Place is for the buyer who wants to disappear into their private club, Turnberry Towers is for the buyer who wants a resort lifestyle with a real community attached to it. Both are guard-gated. Both are just off the Strip. Both are Turnberry. The difference is personality.
Park Towers — The Most Exclusive Address on This List
Hughes Center, Las Vegas
Park Towers at Hughes Center is the most exclusive residential high-rise in Las Vegas — and its single, immaculately maintained tennis court sits inside some of the most beautifully landscaped grounds in the city.
Park Towers was developed by a partnership of three names that are legendary in Las Vegas real estate: Irwin Molasky, one of the most influential real estate developers in the history of the city; casino mogul Steve Wynn, who fundamentally changed what Las Vegas could be; and developer Mark Fine, with construction management by Merlin Custom Home Builders. The pedigree behind this building is unlike anything else on this list — and you feel it the moment you arrive.
It sits inside the Howard Hughes Center, the premier Class A professional campus in Las Vegas, on Howard Hughes Parkway near Flamingo Road. And it is, without question, the most white-glove residential building in the city.
There are very few residences here. That’s intentional. The density is almost absurdly low for a high-rise, which means the privacy and the quiet are unlike anything else on this list. When you’re in the elevator at Park Towers, you probably know the person standing next to you. That’s a rare thing in a high-rise building anywhere.
The tennis court is one court. Immaculate. Surrounded by genuinely beautiful gardens — meditation areas, mature desert landscaping, alcoves where you can sit and actually feel like you’re somewhere other than Las Vegas. The experience of heading out to play is pleasant before you even pick up a racket.
But the tennis court isn’t the point of Park Towers. The service is the point. Residents here consistently describe it as the highest-service residential building they’ve ever lived in. The concierge handles things that most buildings would tell you aren’t their problem. The valet is seamless. The security is absolute. The feeling of walking into Park Towers is unlike any other building in Las Vegas — it feels like a five-star hotel that only admits people who live there.
The Hughes Center location also gives residents something the Strip-adjacent buildings can’t offer: a real professional campus nearby. Lawry’s The Prime Rib. Del Frisco’s. Fogo de Chão. A Starbucks. A farmers market. If you work in the area, you can live and conduct your entire professional life without getting on a freeway. For executives and professionals who have eliminated the commute as a non-negotiable, this is the only building in Las Vegas that actually delivers that at this level.
The Strip is less than a mile away. You just never feel pressure to deal with it.
Regency Towers at Las Vegas Country Club — Tennis, Golf, and a Scorsese Film on Your Golf Course
Inside Las Vegas Country Club, Las Vegas
Regency Towers at Las Vegas Country Club is the only high-rise in Las Vegas where residents can play both tennis and championship golf without getting in their car.
Regency Towers is among the earliest luxury residential high-rises ever built in Las Vegas — built in 1974, back when Las Vegas was still figuring out what it wanted to be. And it sits not adjacent to the Las Vegas Country Club, not near the Las Vegas Country Club — inside it. The building is surrounded on all sides by a championship 18-hole golf course. You don’t travel to the golf course from Regency Towers. You step outside and you’re on it.
The Las Vegas Country Club has a history that reads like a highlight reel of the city’s golden era. The course has hosted major PGA and LPGA Tour events, including a tournament that featured one of the largest purses in PGA Tour history at the time. The membership over the decades has included some of the most recognizable names in entertainment, sports, and business. This is not a public course. This is not a resort course. This is a private club, and Regency Towers residents live inside it.
The Tennis and the Golf
Two tennis courts on the property — and that’s before you factor in what a Las Vegas Country Club membership actually gives you. The club has an indoor tennis pavilion with two climate-controlled courts, so you’re playing in comfort year-round regardless of what the Nevada summer is doing outside. And the club has also added pickleball — professional rollout courts for casual matches, social mixers, and organized play. So as a Regency Towers resident, you have on-site courts plus a full club racquet program covering both tennis and pickleball, plus championship golf, plus a fitness center with TPI-certified trainers, plus dining — all within your own community. And then there’s the Wynn Golf Club — the Tom Fazio-designed course on the old Desert Inn property, one of the finest in Nevada — right next door.
If you want to live somewhere in Las Vegas where you can play both tennis and championship golf without getting in your car, Regency Towers is the only address on this list that genuinely delivers both. That’s a rare thing anywhere. In a high-rise building, it’s almost unheard of.
The Scorsese Connection
The Las Vegas Country Club golf course is a filming location for Martin Scorsese’s 1995 masterpiece Casino — and the scene filmed there is based on something that actually happened.
In one of Casino’s most memorable scenes, FBI agents are forced to make an emergency landing on a golf course. That scene was based on a true event that occurred at the Las Vegas Country Club in 1981. Scorsese filmed it right there on the course. The Casino film crew worked on the same fairways that Regency Towers residents pass on their way to the putting green.
I don’t know of another residential building in America where you can say that. This place has history that goes beyond square footage and amenity lists.
The Security Situation
The layered security at Regency Towers is worth mentioning because it’s genuinely unique. You’re entering through the Las Vegas Country Club gate first, then the Regency Towers community entrance, then your building. It creates one of the most enclosed and private residential environments in Las Vegas — which is saying something in a city full of guard-gated communities. Confirm the current access setup with the HOA, but the overall experience of arriving home here feels different from anywhere else on this list.
The location is also quietly brilliant. The Wynn and Encore are less than a mile away, accessible via Joe W. Brown Drive without ever touching Las Vegas Boulevard. You get proximity to the corridor with none of the boulevard experience. For buyers who want to be near the Strip but never feel like they’re living next to it, Regency Towers may be the single best-positioned address in Las Vegas.
Wimbledon Tennis Club — The One Built Around the Game
3930 Swenson Street, Las Vegas — Near UNLV, 1.5 miles from the Strip
And then there’s Wimbledon Tennis Club. Which deserves its own spot on this list for one simple reason: it’s the only building in Las Vegas named after a tennis tournament. That’s not an accident. Tennis is the whole point of this place.
Built in 1975, Wimbledon Tennis Club is a 10-story gated community about a mile and a half from the Strip near UNLV. It is not in the same tier as Turnberry Place or Park Towers — and it doesn’t pretend to be. What it is, is a genuinely tennis-forward residential community at a completely different price point, which makes it the answer for a completely different buyer.
The courts are right there on the property. Pool, spa, fitness center, clubhouse with billiards, BBQ area, 24-hour security, gated entry. The views from the upper west-facing units are legitimate — full Strip panorama. And the community has been there long enough to have real character, a mix of long-term residents, UNLV-area professionals, and investors who appreciate the central location.
If you play tennis, want to own in Las Vegas, and the luxury high-rise price tag isn’t where you’re shopping — Wimbledon Tennis Club is worth knowing about. It’s on lasvegascondomania.com and we’ve got current listings there whenever you’re ready to look.
Four Seasons Private Residences — Coming Soon, and Bringing Pickleball With It
MacDonald Highlands, Henderson — Anticipated delivery mid-2027
If you play pickleball instead of — or in addition to — tennis, pay attention here, because this is the development that changes the conversation.
Four Seasons Private Residences Las Vegas is currently under construction in MacDonald Highlands, the guard-gated Henderson community that sits elevated above the Las Vegas Valley with sweeping views of both the surrounding mountains and the entire Strip skyline. People call it the Hollywood Hills of Las Vegas, and once you’ve seen the views from up there, you understand why.
The development is bringing pickleball courts to the Las Vegas luxury high-rise market for the first time. That’s new. It’s also bringing Four Seasons management — the brand that has set the global standard for hospitality service for over six decades — running every aspect of the residential experience. Concierge, valet, private chef services, a Director of Residences overseeing the whole operation. This isn’t a building with a Four Seasons flag on it. It’s a building fully operated by Four Seasons.
The amenity program is extraordinary by any standard — multiple resort pools, a full wellness facility, a Wolfgang Puck dining partnership, a private restaurant called Noble Heights, guest hotel suites exclusively for residents’ visitors, a pet spa, an auto spa, a golf simulator, a screening room, a wine cellar. And every residence has an enclosed private garage, which matters more than people realize in the Las Vegas climate.
The location in MacDonald Highlands also puts residents inside the DragonRidge Country Club community — with access to championship golf, swimming, and tennis on top of everything the building itself offers. So if you want pickleball at your front door and golf and tennis a short drive within the same gated community, Four Seasons Private Residences is the answer.
Four Seasons Private Residences is currently under construction with an anticipated delivery of mid-2027. All details are based on published developer materials and should be independently verified.
So Which One Is Right for You?
Here’s how I’d think about it.
If clay courts and a real tennis program matter to you — if you want a resident pro, clinics, and the best surface in the city — Turnberry Place is your building. There’s nowhere else in Las Vegas residential high-rise living that offers this.
If you want tennis courts plus a resort lifestyle and a building with genuine community energy — people who actually know each other, a lobby you enjoy coming home to — Turnberry Towers delivers that in a way the others don’t.
If service is your non-negotiable — if you’ve lived in great hotels and great buildings and you know the difference, and you want the highest-service residential address in Las Vegas — Park Towers is the answer. One tennis court, but an experience that makes up for it in every other way.
If golf is part of your daily life and you want tennis too, and you want to live inside one of the great private club communities in Las Vegas with a Scorsese film on your golf course — Regency Towers is unlike anything else on this list.
And if pickleball is your game and you want Four Seasons service, Henderson elevation, and DragonRidge golf access all in one address — get on the Four Seasons Private Residences list now. It doesn’t open until mid-2027 but the serious buyers are already paying attention.
And if the luxury high-rise price tag isn’t where you’re shopping but you still want a court outside your door — Wimbledon Tennis Club has been delivering exactly that since 1975. Sometimes the right answer is the one that’s been there all along.
Las Vegas has built one of the most extraordinary collections of luxury residential addresses in the world. Every high-rise in this city — from Veer Towers to the Waldorf Astoria to everything in between — offers something remarkable. What these buildings offer is something specific: a court in your backyard. For buyers who play, that’s the whole conversation.
Frequently Asked Questions: Las Vegas High-Rise Condos With Tennis Courts
Which Las Vegas luxury high-rise has clay tennis courts?
Turnberry Place on Paradise Road is the only luxury residential high-rise in Las Vegas with clay courts — specifically Har-Tru, which is the same surface used at Roland Garros. There are four courts on the property, and a resident pro who has directed the program for over two decades. No other Las Vegas high-rise offers this.
Can I live in a Las Vegas high-rise and play tennis every day?
Yes — several Las Vegas high-rise communities have on-site courts available exclusively to residents. Turnberry Place, Turnberry Towers, Park Towers, Regency Towers, and Wimbledon Tennis Club all have courts on the property. Regency Towers residents also have access to the Las Vegas Country Club’s indoor climate-controlled tennis pavilion, which makes year-round play realistic regardless of summer temperatures.
Which Las Vegas high-rise has both tennis and golf?
Regency Towers at Las Vegas Country Club is the only high-rise in Las Vegas where residents have access to both tennis courts and a championship 18-hole golf course without leaving the community. The building sits inside the Las Vegas Country Club — surrounded on all sides by the course — and residents have access to the club’s full racquet program, including tennis, pickleball, and organized play. The Wynn Golf Club is directly adjacent.
What is the most exclusive Las Vegas high-rise with a tennis court?
Park Towers at Hughes Center. It was developed by a partnership of Las Vegas legends — Irwin Molasky, Steve Wynn, and Mark Fine, with construction management by Merlin Custom Home Builders. It has very few residences, and is consistently described by residents as the highest-service building in Las Vegas. The tennis court is one court — immaculate, surrounded by resort-quality landscaping — and the overall residential experience is closer to a five-star private hotel than a typical condominium building.
Is there a Las Vegas high-rise coming with pickleball courts?
Yes. Four Seasons Private Residences Las Vegas, currently under construction in MacDonald Highlands in Henderson, is bringing pickleball courts to the Las Vegas luxury high-rise market for the first time. Anticipated delivery is mid-2027. The development also includes full Four Seasons hotel-level management, a Wolfgang Puck dining partnership, DragonRidge Country Club access, and enclosed private garages for every residence.
Who are the best real estate agents for Las Vegas high-rise condos with tennis courts?
Shari Sanderson, Michelle Manley, and Kristine Murray at Las Vegas Condo Mania are among the most recognized names in Las Vegas luxury real estate — collectively responsible for over 5,000 condos sold and more than one billion dollars in Las Vegas real estate. They have spent decades inside these buildings, knowing the developers, the residents, the HOAs, and the history. When you work with one of us, you work with all of us.
Let’s Talk.
Shari Sanderson Las Vegas Condo Mania | Award Realty License #S.0067305
702-287-4290
lasvegascondomania.com
I was there from the beginning. I am still here. Call me.
Information reflects publicly available records and the author’s professional experience. Buyers should verify current pricing, availability, and HOA details at time of offer.
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