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Bounded by W. Granada St. on the north, W. Simpson St. on the south, and the right-of-way of the former El Paso and Southwestern railroad line on the east 32°12′58″N 110°58′42″W / 32.216103°N 110.978422°W / 32.216103; -110.978422 ( Barrio El Membrillo Historic
Location: Bounded by W. Granada St. on the north, W. Simpson St. on the south, and the right-of-way of the former El Paso and Southwestern railroad line on the east; listed in the National Register of Historic Places on August 5. 2009, reference: #09000583. [9] Barrio Libre. Location: Roughly bounded by 14th, 19th, Stone and Osborne Sts ...
The Tucson Museum of Art and Historic Block (TMA) is an art museum and art education institution located in the Presidio District of downtown Tucson, Arizona.The museum comprises 74,000-square-feet of exhibition space over a four-acre city block that includes a contemporary main museum and 19th C. historic homes, including the Cordova House (1848), that have been adapted for reuse as the ...
Dec. 2—The Feed Bin, a staple on West Alameda Street for 52 years, closed Monday. It was the only store in the multistate Hubbard Feeds chain, owned by Alltech, to face a shutdown, a spokesman said.
Nov. 14—An Albuquerque man suspected of fatally shooting his ex-girlfriend and her teenage son Monday night at a home off West Alameda Street remained at large Tuesday evening. Local and state ...
The building completed in 1967 originally was home to the Tucson Federal Savings & Loan Bank and known as the Tucson Federal Building. The building was designed by local architects Place & Place and featured a large banking hall on the second floor as well as windows on three sides of the building with a gold sunscreen to protect the west facing windows.
An address listed for Mendez — on West Alameda Street — was the "last known address" for Mendez, Womack-Avila said, and he is believed by deputies to have been homeless for some time.
On the sixth floor was a roof garden and dance hall. Each room included a private telephone connection and private bathroom. All of the furniture was purchased through the Tucson firm of L. Zeckendorf & Company. [16] The Santa Rita Hotel was an important social and cultural touchstone in Tucson. It played host to movie stars and industrialists.