Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Sunnyslope community is an established neighborhood within the borders of the city of Phoenix, Arizona. The geographic boundaries are 19th Avenue to the west, Cactus Road to the north, 16th Street to the east, and Northern Avenue to the south. This area covers approximately nine square miles (23 km 2) and is divided into nine census tracts ...
The road continues northbound to an intersection with Butte Ave, at a traffic light, where the highway turns east and passes the Pinal County Governmental Complex, it terminates at the junction with State Route 79 at the intersection of Butte Ave. and Pinal Parkway Avenue. It is the only state business loop in the state of Arizona.
The full length of Scottsdale Road is part of the National Highway System as a principal arterial. Scottsdale Road begins and Rural Road ends at Rio Salado Parkway at the north end of the Tempe campus of Arizona State University. Scottsdale Road heads north as a six-lane divided highway that immediately crosses over the Salt River.
Different view of the Arizona State Fair Grandstand which was built in the early 1900s and is located at 1826 West McDowell Road. The Ong Yut Geong Market Warehouse was built in 1930 and is located at 502 S. 2nd.
Arizona State Route 101 (SR 101) or Loop 101 is a semi-beltway looping around the Phoenix Metropolitan Area in central Arizona, United States. It connects several suburbs of Phoenix , including Tolleson , Glendale , Peoria , Scottsdale , Mesa , Tempe , and Chandler .
view of North Phoenix and Phoenix Mountains. North/Northwest Phoenix is a region in the city of Phoenix, Arizona.While the area with this name has no official separate status, it usually refers to the Urban Villages of Paradise Valley (not to be confused with the independent town of Paradise Valley), North Mountain, Deer Valley, Desert View, and North Gateway.
This is a directory of properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Arizona. There are 1,491 listed sites in the state, and each of its fifteen counties has at least ten listings on the National Register. Forty-seven of the state's sites are further designated as National Historic Landmarks.
No improvements were made to the Yuma–Duncan Road between 1909 and 1912, with all funding going towards the Grand Canyon–Duncan Territorial Road between the Grand Canyon area and Douglas. In 1912, Arizona Territory was granted statehood, which changed the organization of the Territorial Road System into the new State Highway System. [4]