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Luke Tupper's Brother, Gerald Tupper, was a lawyer in Phoenix and formally incorporated Esperança into a non-profit in 1970. For the first 15 years Esperança operated out of a room in Gerald's law office. [8] Esperança moved to its permanent central Phoenix location in 1985. [9]
Your basement has so much potential! See the items that professional organizers recommend donating or recycling to make the most of your space.
The plant at Clarkdale in 2013. The Phoenix Cement Company, headquartered in Phoenix, operates a cement plant in Clarkdale in the U.S. state of Arizona.Built in 1959 by the American Cement Company to make cement for construction of the Glen Canyon Dam on the Colorado River, the Clarkdale plant produces Portland cement, fly ash, and gypsum for a regional market.
The Calvin C. Goode municipal building is a 10 story government office building located in Downtown Phoenix, Arizona. It opened in 1963 as the Phoenix Municipal Building and originally served as the city hall. The property also contains the Phoenix City Council Chambers in a separate circular outbuilding. [1]
The success of the Phoenix column led to the formation of a construction subsidiary named Clarke, Reeves & Co. Later renamed the Phoenixville Bridge Works and finally the Phoenix Bridge Company , the firm ultimately built some 4,200 bridges, primarily wrought iron truss railway bridges. [ 10 ]
Phoenix, Arizona building and structure stubs (19 P) Pages in category "Buildings and structures in Phoenix, Arizona" The following 78 pages are in this category, out of 78 total.
Phoenix: 1946 Hotels P A Cable One: Consumer Services Specialized consumer services Phoenix: 1997 Internet and cable service provider P A Carlisle Companies: Industrials Manufacturing Scottsdale: 1917 Construction and automotive materials P A Carvana: Consumer goods Specialty reatilers Tempe: 2013 Auto dealer P A Circle K: Consumer services ...
The building is made largely from materials indigenous to Arizona, including malapai, granite, and the copper dome. The design is optimized for the desert climate of Arizona, with thick masonry walls that insulate the interior, skylights, and round "bullseye" clerestory windows to let heat out of the legislative chambers.