Las Vegas · Nevada

Junk removal across the Las Vegas Valley. The hospitality capital.

The Las Vegas Strip generates more hospitality and gaming commercial waste than any other corridor in the country. Beyond the Strip, Las Vegas hosts one of the most active master-planned community markets in the country, with Summerlin, Henderson, and the Southwest growth corridor driving sustained residential and corporate growth. JRP runs route coverage across Clark County.

JRP commercial work in the Las Vegas Valley
~2.4M
Las Vegas metro population
~40M
Annual visitors to the Strip corridor
$30-45
Per ton commercial landfill rate
SNHD
Local solid waste authority (Clark County)

Why Las Vegas is operationally distinctive

One commercial corridor that dominates the entire metro.

Las Vegas's commercial profile is unlike any other metro we cover because of how thoroughly the Strip dominates. The Las Vegas Strip is roughly 4 miles of resort and hospitality concentration that generates more commercial waste volume than the entire downtowns of most major cities. MGM Resorts International, Caesars Entertainment, Wynn, Sands, and the rest of the major operators run hundreds of thousands of hotel rooms, dozens of casinos, hundreds of restaurants and retail outlets, and substantial back-of-house operational footprint.

Strip work has unique operational requirements that don't apply elsewhere in our network. Back-of-house access only — no commercial vehicles on the casino floor or front-facing properties. Off-hours work is standard to avoid guest impact. Security protocols on every floor and freight elevator. Chain-of-custody documentation for high-value FF&E disposal during refresh cycles. These requirements add operational complexity that needs to be priced into every Strip-property project.

A note on geography: the Las Vegas Strip is technically in unincorporated Paradise, Nevada — not the City of Las Vegas — which matters for some operational and tax considerations even though "Las Vegas" is how everyone refers to the metro.

The growth corridor reality

Beyond the Strip, one of the most active master-planned markets.

The non-Strip Las Vegas commercial market is dominated by master-planned communities and active growth corridors. Summerlin (Howard Hughes Corp.) anchors the western metro with substantial corporate office, retail, and high-end residential. Henderson on the southeast side has emerged as a major suburban growth corridor with active multifamily, retail, and corporate office development. The Southwest corridor (Spring Valley, Enterprise) continues to see rapid residential expansion.

For commercial customers outside the resort sector, Las Vegas operates more like a fast-growing Sunbelt suburb than a hospitality market. Property management portfolios, GC post-build cleanouts, retail rollouts in growth corridor centers, and pre-listing/estate cleanouts in Summerlin and Henderson make up the bulk of non-Strip commercial volume.

Nevada solid waste regulation is split: the Nevada Division of Environmental Protection (NDEP) handles areas outside Clark and Washoe Counties, while the Southern Nevada Health District (SNHD) administers solid waste regulation locally in Clark County. We coordinate with SNHD-permitted facilities and routing.

Submarkets we cover

Coverage across the Valley.

The Las Vegas metro is concentrated in Clark County. The Strip resort corridor dominates economically, but the surrounding submarkets each have distinct commercial and residential profiles.

Hospitality & gaming
The Strip / Resort Corridor

Roughly 4 miles of major resort and casino properties. MGM Resorts, Caesars, Wynn, Sands, and others. Common scopes: hotel FF&E refreshes, restaurant and retail rollouts within resort properties, back-of-house facility cleanouts. Off-hours work and back-of-house access protocols standard.

CBD office & entertainment
Downtown Las Vegas / Fremont

Historic downtown with mixed corporate office, hospitality, and growing residential. Fremont Street experience anchors entertainment activity. Common scopes: office TI debris, hotel furniture refreshes, and growing multifamily turnover.

Master-planned corporate
Summerlin

Howard Hughes Corp. master-planned community on the western edge of the Valley. Substantial corporate office, retail, and high-end residential. Common scopes: corporate office TI work, decommissioning, and high-end residential project work.

Suburban growth
Henderson

Major southeast growth corridor with active corporate office, retail, multifamily, and residential development. Established residential plus rapidly growing newer submarkets. Common scopes mirror Summerlin patterns plus Henderson-specific master-planned community work.

Industrial & logistics
North Las Vegas

Major industrial and logistics corridor with substantial distribution facility presence. The Republic Services Transfer Station is located here (315 W Cheyenne Ave). Common scopes: distribution facility cleanouts, warehouse refreshes, and post-construction projects.

Suburban growth
Spring Valley / Enterprise

Southwest growth corridors with rapid residential expansion plus growing retail and multifamily. Common scopes: GC post-build cleanouts, multifamily portfolios, and homeowner project work.

Established residential
Paradise / Sunrise Manor

Established Clark County residential corridors. Active multifamily, retail, and small commercial. Common scopes: pre-listing cleanouts, estate work, and small-business commercial accounts.

Resort & recreation
Boulder City / Lake Mead

Boulder City is the only Nevada city where casino gambling is prohibited — distinctive small-town residential plus recreation activity around Lake Mead and Hoover Dam. Common scopes: residential project work, small commercial, and recreation-property turnover.

How disposal works in the Las Vegas Valley

The infrastructure behind every pickup.

Nevada solid waste regulation is administered through three Solid Waste Management Authorities. The Nevada Division of Environmental Protection (NDEP) handles all areas outside Clark and Washoe Counties. Clark County (Las Vegas metro) is administered locally by the Southern Nevada Health District (SNHD). Washoe County (Reno) operates separately. Las Vegas disposal is centered on one of the largest landfills in the country.

Apex Regional Landfill
13550 US Highway 93 North · Operated by Republic Services · One of the largest landfills in the US

Primary regional landfill for the Las Vegas Valley. Receives the majority of Clark County MSW. Featured by PBS in the "Overview" series for its scale and operations. Used as the disposal endpoint for our routes covering Las Vegas commercial volume.

Republic Services Transfer Station
315 W Cheyenne Ave, North Las Vegas NV 89030 · M-Sun 7am-3pm

Major regional transfer facility consolidating commercial, residential, and contractor loads before transport to Apex. Open 7 days/week. Used heavily for our routes covering the central and northern Valley.

Western Elite MRF — Wynn Road
West of I-15 at Tropicana Ave · Materials Recovery Facility

One of the largest recycling operations in Nevada. Easy Strip-corridor access. Post-collection sorting model recovers recyclables (cardboard, paper, plastics, metals, glass) from commingled commercial waste. Used heavily for Strip-adjacent commercial routing.

Western Elite MRF — Alto/Nellis
Northeastern Las Vegas near Nellis AFB

Second Western Elite Materials Recovery location. Same operating model as Wynn Road. Used for our routes covering the northeastern Valley including military-adjacent work near Nellis AFB.

SNHD-Permitted Disposal Facilities
Class I (MSW), II (industrial), III (inert/industrial)

Clark County classifies disposal facilities into three classes. Class I accepts MSW, Class II accepts non-hazardous industrial waste, Class III accepts inert/industrial solid waste. We route by waste classification per SNHD permits.

Tire Recovery Facilities
Required — waste tires prohibited from Clark County municipal landfills

Clark County prohibits waste tires at municipal landfills. Tires must route to specialized recovery facilities for recycling, tire-derived fuel production, or disposal outside Clark County. We coordinate tire diversion for project loads that include them.

Disposal routing depends on jurisdiction (SNHD for Clark County), waste classification, and project location. Strip-property work typically requires Western Elite MRF routing for commercial recyclables given proximity and resort-corridor access protocols.

Most common Las Vegas scopes

Where Las Vegas customers most often work with us.

Tell us about the Las Vegas job.

Single pickup, recurring contract, multi-property portfolio, or one-time project. Whatever the scope, we'll route to the right rep and respond within one business day. For single-item household pickups, the fastest path is self-serve booking with upfront pricing.

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Las Vegas accounts

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