Aqua Clemente Casino
Agua Caliente Resort Casino Spa Rancho Mirage is a prized location for the savvy conference and meeting planner. The conference center boasts a modern, flexible 10,000 square-foot meeting space. For smaller events, the space can easily be converted into eight individual meeting rooms. The conference center at Agua Caliente Resort Casino Spa Rancho Mirage also features a separate kitchen dedicated to servicing conference guests with quality and efficiency.
The San Clemente Inn offers our guests the best of San Clemente. Enjoy a quality experience, while discovering the inner beauty of this truly charming beach city. While allowing easy access to the best of what Southern California has to offer, San Clemente Inn is the perfect place to unwind at the end of a busy day with two Jacuzzi’s, outdoor.
- 1000 Brickell Plaza #3912 Miami, FL 33131. 2 Beds 2 Baths $819 Sq/Ft.
- Revival culture, history, and heritage of San Clemente. Ole Hanson brought us tile sidewalks and designs incorporated into historic buildings including the Casa Romantica and Casa Pacifica. More recent applications occur in the historic Downtown, reflecting the history of San Clemente. Other, more recent installations along the.
CORPORATE ACCOUNTS GROUP STAYS CONFERENCES & EVENTS
We're looking forward to hosting your Group's next stay at Agua Caliente Resort Casino Spa Rancho Mirage.
Corporate Accounts
We offer discounted rates for weekday and weekend stays.
Contact us about specials for extended corporate stays, and for more information regarding Corporate Account Reservations.
There is no two-night minimum (except Memorial Day weekend), restaurants onsite, and entertainment for every guest.
Group Stays
We offer discounted group rates for those booking 10 or more rooms, plus additional special group offers.
Your group still receives access to all the same amenities located onsite.
Certain black out dates and holidays may be excluded
CONFERENCE AND EVENT FACILITIES
Exciting new space for meetings and events of any size such as business retreats, social gatherings, weddings, awards ceremonies, Bar Mitzvahs, Confirmation Parties and more. Simply tell us what you need.
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OUTDOOR VENUE
Magnificent outdoor event lawn with dramatic views of the San Jacinto Mountains. Truly spectacular.
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WEDDINGS
Plan your wedding at our spectacular new resort and casino. From our event lawn to our spectacular luxury hotel to our casino to our world-class spa and amazing restaurants and pool, your party will NEVER want to leave!
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THE SHOW CONCERT THEATRE
The Show Concert Theatre is not just for today's hottest entertainers. This premier venue offers an exclusive state-of-the-art space for your general sessions, meetings, conventions and special events.
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CONTACT INFORMATION
Sally Langwell
Senior Sales Manager
Phone: 760.202.2110
Fax: 760.202.6054
slangwell@accmail.net
Seeking Meeting Space for a Day Seminar, Meeting, or Special Event?
Rick Gilbert
Banquets Manager
Phone: 760.202.2106
Fax: 760-202-2130
rgilbert@accmail.net
Vicky Chavez
Banquets Supervisor
Phone: 888.999.1995 x2147
Fax: 760.202.2130
vchavez@accmail.net
There are remains of two Roman aqueducts which supplied the Roman city of Toletum (modern Toledo) in Castile-La Mancha, Spain. The infrastructure carried water from various sources with the main reservoir located at Mazarambroz to the south of the city in the Montes de Toledo Comarca.
History[edit]
The Romans captured Toledo in 193 BC.[1] The aqueducts are difficult to date precisely. They seem to have been built in the 1st or 2nd centuries A.D.[2]
Remains[edit]
At Mazarambroz there is a ruined Roman dam, known as Alcantarilla, on the Guajaraz, a tributary of the Tagus. From Mazarambroz the water was conveyed via Layos (where there is a modern dam on the Guajaraz).[3]
Horno de Vidrio[edit]
A pressure drop tower, popularly known as the Horno de Vidrio, survives in the final section of the aqueduct.[4] Elsewhere the Romans used drop towers to harness water power for mills, but this structure functioned as a water energy dissipator. The water entered the tower via an arcade. The tower firstly facilitated the aqueduct a less steep path towards Toledo; secondly, it allowed the aqueduct to lose height without excessive slope.[4]
Aqueduct bridge[edit]
Only the base of the aqueduct bridge by which water entered Toledo survives. From its position above the Tagus gorge, it has been suggested the Romans used an inverted siphon to bring the water into the city. Such technology is known to have been used elsewhere in the Iberian Peninsula, for example Cádiz, although it is not directly evidenced at Toledo.[5]
Conservation[edit]
The remains of the hydraulic system are partly protected by a heritage designation (Bien de Interés Cultural).[2]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^Spann, P. 'Places: 266066 (Toletum)'. Pleiades. Retrieved 2018-05-17.
- ^ ab'Restos del acueducto' [Remains of the aqueduct] (in Spanish). Retrieved 2018-05-29.
- ^Gomez, I (1995). 'Toledo beberá del mismo embalse que suministra a Madrid'. El Pais (in Spanish).
- ^ abconsorciotoledo.com (2014). EN TORNO A LA RED ROMANA DE ABASTECIMIENTO DE AGUA A TOLEDO: Excavaciones en los terrenos de la ACADEMIA MILITAR DE INFANTERÍA [Roman water supply to Toledo (Spain): excavations in the fields of the Toledo Infantry Academy] (in Spanish). ISSN0514-7336.
- ^'Greek and Roman Siphons'. Retrieved 2018-05-29.