Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Shea Homes’ parent company, the J. F. Shea Co., was founded in 1881 in Portland, Oregon by John Francis Shea. In 1998, it acquired UDC Homes, which had been the largest homebuilder in the Phoenix market and had a presence in California. [1]
Shea Properties parent company, the J.F. Shea Co, was founded in 1881 in Portland, Oregon by John Francis Shea. The J. F. Shea Company's activities include new-home construction, commercial construction, civil engineering, commercial and multi-family property development and management, construction materials and venture capital.
The J.F. Shea Co., Inc. is one of the largest privately held construction and real estate companies in the United States.J.F. Shea comprises a collection of companies including Shea Properties, Shea Homes, Shea Ventures, (Venture Capital), J.F. Shea Construction Inc., the Redding Division, Reed Manufacturing, Trilogy and Bluestar Resort & Golf.
I-10 – Phoenix, Tucson: ADOT signs this as southern terminus; I-10 exit 211: Picacho: Closed interchange; was southbound exit only: Eastern terminus of unsigned SR 84 segment: 115.77: 186.31: SR 84 west (Casa Grande-Picacho Highway west) South end state maintenance of SR 87; western end of unsigned SR 84 concurrency; Casa Grande-Picacho Hwy ...
Tivoli Village is a mixed-use development center consisting of retail and office space, located on 28.43 acres (11.51 ha) at 410 South Rampart Boulevard in Las Vegas, Nevada, [1] next to the Summerlin community. [2] It is owned by 3D Investments. The project was announced in May 2005, as The Village at Queensridge.
English: District map of the Phoenix City Council, effective from 2013 to 2024. Feature layer from the City of Phoenix via ArcGIS, converted with QGIS and Mapshaper. Interactive version at Data:Phoenix City Council Districts (2013–2024).map
In the late 1980s, UDC established a reputation in the Phoenix high-end "move-up" market for homes that backed onto golf courses, artificial lakes, and mountains. [12] It was the second-largest homebuilder in Phoenix in the early 1990s, with 1,654 permits in 1994 alone; that year, it was the ninth-largest homebuilder in the country. [ 13 ]
Center Street in 1908. Central Avenue was originally named Center Street upon Phoenix's founding with the surrounding north–south roads named after Indian tribes. [3] The original Churchill Addition of 1877, covering a small area north of Van Buren Street to what is presently Roosevelt Street, was the first recorded plat showing Central Avenue with its present name. [4]