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This station has three names: Valley Metro calls the train platforms of this station Veterans Way/College Ave and the local bus bays the Tempe Transportation Center. Both are part of the same facility and immediately adjacent to Mountain America Stadium which serves as the station's third name, as shown on the train platform signs.
The Tempe Municipal Building is an inverted pyramid-shaped building which serves as the city hall of Tempe, Arizona. It was designed by architects Rolf Osland , Michael Goodwin and Kemper Goodwin , and built during 1969–1971.
Tempe is located in the East Valley section of metropolitan Phoenix; it is bordered by Phoenix and Guadalupe on the west, Scottsdale and the Salt River Pima–Maricopa Indian Community on the north, Chandler on the south, and Mesa on the east. Tempe is the location of the main campus of Arizona State University.
University Dr/Rural, also known as ASU Tempe Campus or simply University for the school and street, is a station on the Metro light rail line in Tempe, Arizona, United States. The station is not actually at the intersection of its named streets, sitting some distance south of University Drive, with the platforms running northwest from Rural ...
The school opened in the fall of 1977, serving the then rural areas of South Tempe and West Chandler. The school expanded in 1986 [ 5 ] and in 2001. As of 2010, Corona del Sol is an open-enrollment school.
Harry Walker House – built in 1903 and located at 118 E. 7th Street. The architectural style: Neo-Colonial Influence. It was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on May 7, 1984, reference #84000745. The Harrington-Birchett House – built in 1895 and located at 202 E. 7th Street. The house was built by J.W. Harrington and sold ...
Sun Devil Gym is a 4,609-seat multi-purpose arena in Tempe, Arizona. It was home to the Arizona State University Sun Devils basketball team from 1953 until the Desert Financial Arena opened in 1974. The building is now known as Physical Education West and is used mostly for classrooms and events.
Local rail service in Tempe began in the 1890s, with the opening of a short horsecar line operated by the Tempe Street Railway. The line was unsuccessful, and closed before the end of the decade. [10] The city of Tempe began studying options for a downtown streetcar in 2007, while construction was underway on the Valley Metro Rail system. Plans ...