The Park Las Vegas is an outdoor pedestrian corridor on the Las Vegas Strip, running between New York-New York and Park MGM on the west side of Las Vegas Boulevard, and connecting those properties through to T-Mobile Arena. It is designed as a walkable entertainment district: open-air sculpture installations, restaurant patios, bars, and a landscaped path that funnels visitors between the casino properties and the arena. On a Golden Knights game night or a major concert at T-Mobile Arena, the entire stretch fills well before tip-off and stays crowded long after the final buzzer. Rock N' Potato at Showcase Mall, Suite 207, 3785 S Las Vegas Blvd, is directly across Las Vegas Blvd from this cluster. It is not inside The Park, and it is not a casino property. It is a counter-service spot a short walk away across the boulevard, with no reservation, no minimum spend, and a menu priced well below the Strip restaurants that line the western side of the district.
What The Park Las Vegas Is and Where It Sits
The Park opened in 2016 as a designed connection point between two casino properties and a major arena. It runs along a dedicated pedestrian path on the west side of Las Vegas Blvd, roughly between the Tropicana Avenue intersection to the south and the T-Mobile Arena entrance to the north. New York-New York sits at the southern anchor, Park MGM occupies the central portion of the block, and T-Mobile Arena sits at the far north end of the corridor. The whole stretch is maybe a five to seven minute walk end to end at a relaxed pace.
What makes The Park a meaningful landmark for dining decisions is the T-Mobile Arena connection. The arena seats roughly 17,500 people for hockey and adjusts configuration for UFC and concerts. On event nights, the pedestrian corridor fills with people who need to eat before doors open or want somewhere to go after the final horn. The restaurant and bar options inside The Park itself tend to fill fast on those nights, and the lines form early. That is the practical context that makes the across-the-street option at Showcase Mall relevant: it is outside the crowd bottleneck, it does not take reservations, and it turns orders faster than a sit-down restaurant.
How Close Rock N Potato Is and How to Get There
Showcase Mall sits directly across Las Vegas Blvd from the New York-New York and Park MGM block. The walk from The Park corridor to Rock N' Potato takes under five minutes. Here is the route on foot from The Park pedestrian corridor:
Walk east from The Park to the Las Vegas Blvd sidewalk. Head to the Tropicana Avenue intersection at the southern end of the block. Cross Las Vegas Blvd at the signalized crosswalk. Enter Showcase Mall at street level on the east side of the boulevard. Take the escalator from the ground floor up to the second floor. Suite 207 is straight ahead in the food court.
There is no navigation required beyond that single street crossing. The Tropicana Avenue intersection is one of the main signalized crossings on this block of the Strip, used by the pedestrian flow that moves between the MGM Grand, Excalibur, and the NYNY/Park MGM cluster. If you have walked from your hotel to The Park or to T-Mobile Arena, you have likely already passed the Showcase Mall entrance on the east side of the boulevard. The building is next to M&M World and sits directly across from the MGM Grand at that same intersection.
For guests staying at Park MGM or New York-New York, the walk to Showcase Mall starts from your hotel lobby and reaches Suite 207 in roughly the same time it takes to walk from one end of The Park to the other. It is not a long detour. It is effectively across the street.
Why Counter Service Fits the Park Visitor Context
The visitor arriving at The Park Las Vegas before a T-Mobile Arena event is working with a hard time constraint. Doors open at a specific time, lines form at the entrance well before that, and the pedestrian corridor gets genuinely crowded in the final hour before tip-off or showtime. A sit-down restaurant in this context creates a real problem: you have to book ahead, you give up control of your pace, and you run the risk of a slow kitchen on a night when every restaurant in the district is running at capacity. A 90-minute dinner reservation that runs long can cost you your seats and your parking window.
Counter service removes that variable. At Rock N' Potato, you walk in, read the board, order at the window, and pick up your food when your name is called. There is no reservation to have made in advance and no table wait. If the group is ready to go in 30 minutes, you leave in 30 minutes. If you want to sit longer and eat slowly before walking back across the boulevard to the arena, no one is turning the table. The format gives you the clock back, and on an event night that is the most valuable thing a restaurant near an arena can offer.
Counter service also means the price point holds. The kitchen at Rock N' Potato is not charging a service premium to offset table staffing. Most plates on the menu land between $10.95 and $16.95. That reads differently on an event night when the sit-down options in The Park district are running arena-adjacent pricing on food and drinks.
What to Order
The menu at Rock N' Potato is built around loaded Idaho baked potatoes, birria, a lobster roll, smashburgers, and wings. The full price list below covers every current item.
Loaded Baked Potatoes
The Fleetwood MacDaddy ($35.95) is the large-format statement: a whole lobster tail on an Idaho baked potato. It is the order for anyone who wants a single plate that covers a full meal with room to spare before a long event night. The Fleetwood Mac ($20.95) is the mid-range lobster build. The Dirty Motley ($15.95) is a fully loaded potato for guests who want the complete loaded-potato experience. The Birria King ($16.95) loads braised birria beef onto an Idaho potato with cheese, sour cream, and consomme on the side. The Original Groupie ($10.95) is the clean, unfussy version: butter, sour cream, cheddar, and chives, priced under $10.
Birria
The Birria Tacos ($10.95) are a natural pre-show order for anyone who wants something smaller and shareable. The Birria Fries ($14.95) work well as a shared plate for a group alongside individual potato orders. The Chilaquiles Birria ($12.95) brings the braised beef over crispy tortilla chips with salsa and cheese. For anyone who wants the birria in burger form, the Birria Smashburger ($15.95) is a smash-style beef patty with birria toppings.
Everything Else
The Chuck Berry Fried Chicken ($15.95) is a full fried chicken plate. The Lobster Roll ($16.95) is a standalone New England-style order for anyone who wants the lobster without the potato format. Wings ($10.95) cover the group table for anyone who prefers that direction. Cheese Fries ($8.95) are the lower-commitment side for anyone keeping the pre-show meal light. Close out with Fruity Pebbles Cheesecake ($8.95) if there is time before walking back to the arena.
Coming Back Late: Hours After T-Mobile Arena Events
T-Mobile Arena events end at unpredictable times. A Golden Knights game that goes to overtime or a concert with two encores can push the post-show crowd out onto Las Vegas Blvd well past midnight on a Friday or Saturday. The pedestrian corridor through The Park backs up when 17,000 people filter out at once, and the bar and restaurant options inside the district fill immediately with that crowd. The sit-down restaurants have kitchens closing around then or are turning away walk-ins entirely.
Rock N' Potato is open until 1:00am on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. Counter service means there is no last-seating cutoff. You walk up to the window and order as long as the kitchen is open. The walk back from T-Mobile Arena through The Park to Las Vegas Blvd, across at Tropicana Avenue, and up the escalator to Suite 207 takes under 10 minutes. There is no reservation to have set up in advance, no table wait, and no line for seats. You are ordering at a window, and the counter is available until 1:00am.
On weeknights, Monday through Thursday, the kitchen runs until 11:30pm. Most NHL regular season games and weeknight concerts wrap up in that window. Guests walking from T-Mobile Arena after a Wednesday Golden Knights game have the same counter-service option available.
For more on the T-Mobile Arena food and dining situation before and after events, see the food near T-Mobile Arena Las Vegas guide.
Rock N Potato: Info and Directions
Rock N' Potato at Showcase Mall
Suite 207, 3785 S Las Vegas Blvd, Las Vegas, NV 89109
Directly across Las Vegas Blvd from The Park Las Vegas (the pedestrian corridor between New York-New York, Park MGM, and T-Mobile Arena). Cross at the Tropicana Avenue intersection on Las Vegas Blvd, enter Showcase Mall at street level, take the escalator to the second floor. Suite 207 is straight ahead in the food court. Under 5 minutes on foot from The Park corridor. Counter service, no reservation needed.
Hours: Monday through Thursday, 8:00am to 11:30pm. Friday through Sunday, 8:00am to 1:00am.
Phone: (725) 205-3293
Rated 4.8 on Google, 4.9 on TripAdvisor across 503 reviews, and Yelp Top 100 number 23 nationally for 2026.