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The Sheraton Phoenix Downtown hotel welcomed its first guests inside on September 30, 2008. The hotel has 1,000 rooms, a 6,500-square-foot (600 m 2 ) fitness center , a 2,000-square-foot (190 m 2 ) outdoor pool and sundeck, 80,000 square feet (7,400 m 2 ) of meeting space including a 29,000-square-foot (2,700 m 2 ) ballroom and a 15,000-square ...
Saboten Con is an annual four-day anime convention held during August/September at the Sheraton Phoenix Downtown in Phoenix, Arizona. [2] The convention is held over Labor Day weekend. Its name comes from the Japanese word saboten , meaning "cactus".
Skyline of Phoenix in 2009. Phoenix, the capital of the U.S. state of Arizona, has 58 completed high-rises taller than 200 feet (61 m). [1] The tallest building in Phoenix is the 40-story Chase Tower, completed in 1972 with 38 habitable floors rising to 483 feet (147 m). [2] It is also the tallest building in Arizona.
The Sheraton Phoenix Downtown's multimillion-dollar renovation includes a new restaurant and lounge, plus these upgrades for guests. This downtown Phoenix hotel's multimillion-dollar renovation is ...
Aerial of downtown Phoenix, Arizona. (November 27, 2011) Note: Table widths too wide for most users; tables forced to 1920px to prevent crowding. The following is a chronological list of buildings in the state of Arizona that are taller than 7-stories or have historical relevance, grouped by city.
Downtown Phoenix is the central business district (CBD) of the City of Phoenix, Arizona, United States. It is in the heart of the Phoenix metropolitan area or Valley of the Sun. Phoenix, being the county seat of Maricopa County and the capital of Arizona, serves as the center of politics, justice and government on the local, state and federal ...
The Valley Metro Light Rail system map. Valley Metro Rail is a light rail transit system that serves the Phoenix metropolitan area in Arizona, United States. The light rail system, which operates under the Valley Metro brand name, has 41 stations and 29.8 miles (48.0 km) of tracks within the cities of Phoenix, Tempe, and Mesa. [1]
Arizona Center was designed by The Rouse Company (on its festival marketplace model, which worked to great success in other cities) and opened in the fall of 1990 to great fanfare and high expectations, as it was considered one of the original components of the ongoing downtown revitalization efforts in Phoenix taking place since the early 1990s.