Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Green Corner Restaurant in Mesa, AZ, is a delightful eatery celebrated for its fresh, flavorful Mediterranean cuisine. Popular menu items include the succulent chicken shawarma, savory falafel ...
Not all lazy rivers are created equal. The best ones offer enough inner tubes so there's always one available when you’re ready to float.
The Buckhorn Baths Motel at 5900 East Main Street at the corner of North Recker Road in Mesa, Arizona was a small mineral hot springs resort which offered a bathhouse as well as both cottages and motel rooms for overnight stays. Beginning in 1936 as a gas station and store, Ted and Alice Sliger developed the property into a resort complex which ...
In addition to the all-inclusive resort's lazy river, the water park also has a 280-foot water slide, three secluded whirlpools, and a poolside concierge for ultimate relaxation.
The lazy wave river at Ramayana Water Park in Pattaya, Thailand. A lazy river is a water ride found in water parks, hotels, resorts, and recreation centers, which usually consists of a shallow (2.5–3.5-foot (0.76–1.07 m)) pool that flows similarly to a river. [1]
Mesa Air Group (Phoenix) Microchip Technology (Chandler) Mobile Mini (Tempe) ON Semiconductor (Phoenix) OnTrac (Chandler) P.F. Chang's China Bistro (Scottsdale) Peter Piper Pizza (Phoenix) Ping Golf (Phoenix) Pure Flix Entertainment (Scottsdale) Rural Metro (Scottsdale) Salt River Project (Phoenix) Shamrock Farms (Phoenix) Tilted Kilt (Tempe) U ...
The resort completed its last expansion in 2018 to include a 12-story hotel tower, bringing an additional 200 rooms, totaling 529 total rooms. The pool and swim-up bar, completed in 2012, were renovated and completed in early 2019. The expansion also included an 18,000-square-foot multi-use entertainment space for live shows, weddings, and ...
Malouf Construction and Development Co., [2] a construction company founded by Phoenix retail developer Grant Malouf, first proposed Tri-City Mall in 1963. He had tried to acquire land that the University of Arizona was using as an alfalfa farm, at the corner of West Main Street and Dobson Road, [2] but instead chose a 40-acre (16 ha) plot across the street when it became available.