Strip Pavement and Pool Deck Burns: Heat-Related Premises Injuries in Las Vegas

If you or your child sustained burn injuries from contact with hot pavement, a pool deck, a metal pool ladder, or outdoor seating at a Las Vegas hotel, resort, or other commercial property, the case is a real and viable category of premises liability claim, even though the heat itself is “natural.”

The short answer: heat is not an act of God under Nevada law. Las Vegas pavement and outdoor surfaces routinely reach 170 to 180°F in midday summer sun, well above the temperature range at which skin contact produces serious burns. Nevada law treats this as a foreseeable hazard that hotels and resorts have control over and are legally required to take reasonable precautions against.

The framework is established by Nevada Supreme Court premises liability decisions. Under Foster v. Costco Wholesale Corp., 128 Nev. 773, 291 P.3d 150 (2012), Nevada property owners owe a “general duty of reasonable care” to all invitees, “regardless of the open and obvious nature of dangerous conditions.” The duty analysis focuses on “foreseeability and gravity of harm, and the feasibility and availability of alternative conduct that would have prevented the harm.” A surface temperature that produces second-degree burns in seconds, which the property could have mitigated through surface material selection, shade structures, cooling systems, or warnings, falls squarely within this framework.

The Data: Las Vegas Surface Temperatures and Burn Injuries

The burn-injury reality of Las Vegas summer is documented in peer-reviewed medical literature. A five-year study published in the Journal of Burn Care & Research (Vega, Chestovich, Saquib, Fraser, 2019) reviewed pavement burn admissions to the UMC Lions Burn Care Center in Las Vegas, a verified American Burn Association burn center, between 2013 and 2017 and identified 173 pavement-related burn cases. The study’s findings:

  • More than 88% of pavement-related burn admissions occurred when ambient temperature reached 95°F or higher
  • The risk increases exponentially as ambient temperatures rise above 95°F
  • Pavement temperature in direct sunlight typically runs 30°F or more above ambient temperature
  • At peak temperatures, pavement can cause second-degree burns in seconds

UMC staff describe the summer months as “pavement burn season,” and pavement burns account for approximately 13% of serious burn injuries the center treats.

Surface temperature reference (Las Vegas summer conditions):

Surface / Condition Typical Temperature
Air temperature, peak summer afternoon 105-115°F
Pavement / asphalt in direct sun, 2:00 PM 170-180°F
Dark stone pool deck in direct sun 150-165°F
Metal pool ladder, direct sun 130-160°F
Burn-injury threshold range (per ASTM C1055 / Moritz-Henriques) ~140°F+ produces serious burns in seconds

The medical reality is consistent with engineering consensus. The foundational time-temperature burn relationship was documented by Moritz and Henriques in their 1947 American Journal of Pathology study, “Studies of Thermal Injury,” which established that skin contact with surfaces above approximately 140°F (60°C) can produce serious burns within seconds. ASTM C1055, the national consensus Standard Guide for Heated System Surface Conditions That Produce Contact Burn Injuries, builds on that underlying research and provides the engineering framework for evaluating when heated surfaces produce contact burns. The standard uses a 5-second contact time as the design assumption for industrial situations and a 60-second contact time for consumer situations (where slower reaction times of children, the elderly, or the infirm are considered). Las Vegas summer pavement at 170-180°F substantially exceeds the temperature range at which these standards consider surface contact dangerous.

The hazard is not speculative or weather-dependent. It is documented, quantified, and predictable.

The Nevada Premises Liability Framework

Hotel, casino, and resort guests in Nevada are business invitees, the highest legal category of visitor under Nevada premises liability doctrine. The framework, as developed across multiple Nevada Supreme Court decisions:

The general duty. Property owners owe invitees “a duty to use reasonable care to keep the premises in a reasonably safe condition for use” (Hammerstein v. Jean Development West, 111 Nev. 1471 (1995)). The duty is active. Owners must inspect for dangerous conditions and take precautions even when the hazard is not yet known to them (Twardowski v. Westward Ho Motels, 86 Nev. 784, 476 P.2d 946 (1970), establishing that owners must “take reasonable precautions to protect the invitee from dangers which are foreseeable from the arrangement or use” of the premises).

Open-and-obvious doctrine does not bar recovery. In Foster v. Costco Wholesale Corp. (Nev. 2012), the Nevada Supreme Court held that landowners “bear a general duty of reasonable care to all entrants, regardless of the open and obvious nature of dangerous conditions.” The duty analysis focuses on “foreseeability and gravity of harm, and the feasibility and availability of alternative conduct that would have prevented the harm.” A property cannot defeat a claim merely by arguing that “summer heat is obvious.” The question is whether the property took reasonable precautions against the foreseeable harm.

The foreseeability + reasonable-precautions analysis applied to surface temperatures: A Las Vegas hotel knows its pool deck, parking lot, walkway, and outdoor surfaces will reach burn-causing temperatures in summer. The harm is documented (Vega/Saquib UMC study), quantifiable (engineering standards), and gravely serious (second-degree burns in seconds). Reasonable precautions are feasible and available. Under the Foster framework, the duty applies.

What “Reasonable Precautions” Look Like

The mitigation toolkit available to property owners is well-established:

  • Surface material selection. Light-colored decking, cool-deck coatings, and reflective surface treatments reduce surface temperature substantially. The “albedo effect” (the proportion of light reflected by a surface) directly determines how much solar energy the surface absorbs. Hotels selecting dark asphalt, dark stone, or absorptive concrete for pool decks are choosing materials that maximize surface temperature when alternatives exist.
  • Cooling systems. Misting systems, water-cooled deck surfaces, and active cooling near pool entry points are widely deployed at premium Las Vegas resorts. Their absence at properties where they are feasible is a foreseeable-precaution-failure question.
  • Shade structures. Permanent shade (pergolas, sail shades, building overhangs) directly reduces solar gain on covered surfaces. Continuous shading on heavily trafficked pathways between pool, hotel entrance, and parking is a standard premium-property feature.
  • Warning signage. Where a hazard cannot be eliminated, the duty includes warning. A property that knows its pool deck reaches dangerous temperatures and provides no warning to guests has not satisfied even the minimum duty.
  • Provision of footwear or thermal-barrier mats. Some Las Vegas pool operations distribute flip-flops or other foot protection. UMC’s burn-center outreach program distributes flip-flops at public swimming pools as a known burn-prevention measure.
  • Inspection and temperature monitoring. A property that does not measure or monitor surface temperatures has no operational basis for representing the surfaces as safe. The inexpensive infrared thermometer that establishes whether a deck is at 110°F or 165°F is a routine engineering tool.

The presence or absence of these mitigations is documentable through site inspection, photographs, property records, and discovery of the property’s risk-management documentation.

The Tourist-Specific Reasonableness Analysis

Las Vegas heat is a known phenomenon, and the framing here matters: the legal framework actually supports the tourist’s position rather than undermining it.

Locals know what tourists do not. A Las Vegas resident knows to wear closed-toe shoes in midday parking lots, to keep small children off pool decks at peak heat, and to test surface temperatures before placing skin in contact. A tourist visiting from a temperate climate has none of this knowledge. Resort marketing actively encourages flip-flops, swimwear, casual outdoor dining, and pool-adjacent activity. The operational mode of the property creates the conditions in which the tourist will be barefoot or thinly-shod on the property’s surfaces.

Nevada’s reasonable-care framework does not require the invitee to anticipate every hazard. It requires the property to take reasonable precautions against foreseeable harm. A property that markets pool, outdoor dining, and resort lifestyle to a national tourist demographic knows that demographic does not arrive with desert-acclimated awareness.

The “tourist should have known” defense is, in legal terms, an open-and-obvious defense. Under Foster v. Costco, that defense does not absolve the property owner. It is a comparative-negligence question, not a complete bar.

The Child-Victim Subset

Cases involving child burns warrant separate attention. Children are at structurally higher risk from hot surfaces because of their lower body weight, thinner skin, slower reflex withdrawal, and frequent barefoot contact with surfaces in pool environments. Pediatric pavement burn cases at UMC are commonly the result of a child running barefoot on a hot surface before a caregiver can intervene.

Nevada’s attractive nuisance doctrine imposes heightened duties on property owners with respect to features that attract children and pose a danger the child may not appreciate. Pool decks are the canonical attractive-nuisance setting: they attract children who cannot themselves evaluate the risk that the surface will cause serious burns.

Duty implications for child-victim cases:

  • Heightened reasonable-care expectations under attractive nuisance doctrine
  • Reduced applicability of any “should have known” defense given a child’s inability to appreciate surface-temperature risks
  • Typically larger damages, including:
    • Future scarring / skin grafting projections
    • Possible cosmetic surgical needs
    • Pain-and-suffering recovery commensurate with the long-term consequences of pediatric burns

Building the Evidence Record

Heat-related premises burn cases require deliberate evidence development:

  • Medical documentation. Burn classification (first, second, third degree), affected total body surface area (TBSA), treatment course, surgical interventions, and projected long-term care.
  • The property incident report. Most Las Vegas hotels generate an incident report when a guest reports an injury on premises. Request the report immediately; surveillance video retention windows are typically 30 to 90 days.
  • Photographs of the surface and conditions. Surface temperature on the date of injury (using a phone photo with EXIF metadata, plus an infrared thermometer reading where available); ambient temperature from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) record; presence or absence of warnings, shade, cooling, or footwear provision.
  • Engineering evidence. Surface material identification; specifications of any cooling or shade infrastructure (or its absence); the property’s documented temperature monitoring (or lack of it).
  • Comparable-property evidence. What other Las Vegas Strip and resort properties do (cooling systems, warning signage, cool-deck coatings) establishes the industry standard against which the defendant property is measured.
  • Witness statements. Other guests who experienced or observed the surface temperature problem; staff who acknowledged the hazard.
  • The property’s risk-management documentation (typically discoverable in litigation): internal communications, vendor evaluations of cooling/shading options, prior incidents of similar burns, the property’s own surface temperature measurements.

For the broader premises liability framework, see our premises liability article on hotel room hazards. For pool-related accidents that occurred in the water rather than on the deck, see our pool accident article. Note that scalding burns from defective hot-water plumbing are a distinct category covered separately in our scalding burns from hotel showers article.

A Common Pattern: The Pool-Deck Child Burn

Consider a hypothetical scenario. A family is staying at a Las Vegas Strip hotel in July. The afternoon high is 109°F. A four-year-old runs from the pool toward the lounger where the parents are seated, a distance of approximately 30 feet across a dark stone pool deck. The child sustains second-degree burns on the soles of both feet, requiring transport to UMC Lions Burn Care Center, several days of inpatient treatment, and outpatient burn follow-up over months. The property’s pool deck has no misting, no shade structure over the path between pool and lounger, no warning signage, and no flip-flops or other footwear at the pool entrance. Photographs taken by another guest show the surface at approximately 165°F.

Under the Nevada framework: the harm is foreseeable (documented in peer-reviewed medical literature; ASTM C1055 establishes the engineering thresholds). The gravity of harm is severe. Reasonable precautions are feasible and available (misting, shade, signage, footwear distribution, lighter-colored deck materials). The property’s failure to deploy any of these precautions, against the documented and predictable hazard, supports the foreseeability and reasonable-precautions analysis under Foster, Twardowski, and Hammerstein. This is a hypothetical example for illustrative purposes only. Actual case outcomes depend on specific facts, evidence, and circumstances.

What to Do, When to Act

Statute of limitations: 2 years from the date of injury. The Nevada statute of limitations under NRS 11.190 is two years from the date of injury. Out-of-state plaintiffs are subject to the same period; the Nevada court is generally the proper forum because the injury occurred in Nevada.

If you or a family member has been burned by contact with hot pavement, pool deck, or other outdoor surface at a Las Vegas property:

  1. Seek medical evaluation immediately. Pavement burns are often deeper than they appear; the depth assessment requires clinical examination. UMC Lions Burn Care Center is the verified burn center serving Southern Nevada.
  2. Generate an incident report with the property. Most Las Vegas hotels and resorts will document an injury; insist on the report being created and obtain a copy.
  3. Photograph the surface, the conditions, and your injuries, same day if possible. Phone photos with EXIF metadata establish time and place.
  4. Identify witnesses. Other guests who saw the incident or had similar experiences are valuable corroborators.
  5. Preserve clothing and footwear that contacted the surface. They may show heat damage that supports the surface-temperature claim.
  6. Do not sign any release or accept any “comp” offer from the property without consulting counsel. Properties sometimes offer room comps, meal vouchers, or modest payments in exchange for releases that can foreclose larger claims.

How a Personal Injury Attorney Evaluates These Cases

Heat-related premises liability cases require evidence development against a relatively new application of established doctrine. Relatively new not because the law is unsettled but because the application to Las Vegas surface temperatures has not been heavily litigated. The framework is built from established premises liability precedent (Foster, Twardowski, Hammerstein), peer-reviewed medical literature (the Vega/Saquib UMC study), and the engineering consensus (Moritz-Henriques 1947 + ASTM C1055). Cases turn on the foreseeability and reasonable-precautions analysis, and on the specific mitigations the property had available but did not deploy.

With over 40 years as a personal injury attorney, Jack Bernstein understands how Nevada premises liability cases unfold, including the foreseeability and reasonable-precautions analysis that controls liability for hazards property owners knew or should have known about. If you or a family member has been burned at a Las Vegas hotel, resort, or other property, Jack Bernstein Injury Lawyers offers a free consultation to evaluate the property’s mitigations, the medical record, and the case posture. Call (702) 633-3333.

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