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Sports venues in Tempe, Arizona (13 P) Pages in category "Buildings and structures in Tempe, Arizona" The following 43 pages are in this category, out of 43 total.
Tempe Center for the Arts. Opened in September 2007, Tempe Center for the Arts (TCA) is a community crown jewel for performing and visual arts. The $65 million venue houses a state-of-the-art 600-seat theater, a 200-seat studio theater, a picturesque 200-seat multi-purpose space, a 3,500 square-foot art gallery.
Following that, activists and tenants coalesced as Arizona Tenants Association in 1994. This organization would eventually become Arizona Tenants Advocates. [3] The group lobbied against anti-tenant legislation between 1994–2000. One of the group's crowning achievements was establishing Tempe's rental housing code in 1997, a first for the state.
The house is listed as "Historic" in the Tempe Historic Property Survey. The Newton/Warner House (Methodist Parsonage) – built in 1910 and was originally located at 718 S. Maple St. It was dismantled and rebuilt at 150 S. Ash Ave in 1992 in Tempe's Olde Towne Square. The house is listed as "Historic" in the Tempe Historic Property Survey.
Regency House 235 ft (71 m) 21 [107] George H. Schoneberger [108] $4,000,000 [107] Residential Complete: Originally to be named Royal Towers. [109] 1969 St. Lukes Medical Center 110 ft (30 m) [110] 9 [110] Varney, Sexton, Sydnor Associates: Medical Complete: 1970 Valleywise Health Medical Center: 98 ft (29 m) 8 Lescher & Mahoney: Medical Complete
Location: Tempe, Arizona: Coordinates: 1]: Address: 5000 S Arizona Mills Circle: Opening date: November 20, 1997; 27 years ago (): Developer: Mills Corporation & Taubman Centers: Management: Simon Property Group [2]: Owner: Simon Property Group: No. of stores and services: 172: No. of anchor tenants: 16 (15 open 1 vacant): Total retail floor area: 1,238,193 square feet (115,031.9 m 2): No. of ...
Salt River Project Building, Tempe, 1966–1968 (with Michael Goodwin) Tempe Municipal Building, 1966–1970 (with Michael Goodwin) [5] this upside-down pyramid was designed to shade and cool itself; Marcos de Niza High School, Tempe, 1971 (with Michael Goodwin) [6] Arizona Highway Employees Credit Union, Phoenix, 1971 (with Michael Goodwin) [6]
The C.T. Hayden House, also known as, "La Casa Vieja," or, "The Old House," is a historic building and landmark in Tempe, Arizona, and is the oldest occupied structure in the Salt River Valley (more commonly, The Valley of the Sun [3]). [4] Built in 1873, the home originally belonged to Charles Trumbull Hayden, who founded