36 Hours in Tucson, Arizona.

 

__________main 33333

38

 

76

 

 

 

 

Unhappiness always seeks to get. Happiness always seeks to give.

 

36 Hours in Tucson, Arizona.

 

By RICHARD B. WOODWARD DEC. 31, 2009

TUCSON has worked hard to shed its reputation as a tanning salon for retirees and snowbirds. To complement its natural beauty — a national park in its midst and mountains on four sides — the city has poured hundreds of millions of dollars into its downtown during the last decade. Instead of adding strip malls and high-rises, older buildings were saved and retooled as movie houses and museums. And with a deep-rooted Hispanic community, tides of Mexican immigrants and students from the University of Arizona who never left after graduation, the city has now taken on a youthful and multicultural glow.

36 Hours in Tucson, Arizona.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/03/travel/03hours.html?smid=fb-share&_r=0

Friday

4 p.m.
Tucson’s bone-dry climate is easy on all kinds of metal bodies. The city is a hunting ground for used-car buyers as well as home to one of the world’s largest airplane graveyards. A sample of the 4,000 or so stranded military and civilian aircraft can be viewed by driving along the fence on Kolb Road by the Davis-Monthan Air Force Base. For a closer look, the Pima Air & Space Museum (6000 East Valencia Road; 520-574-0462; pimaair.org) offers tours with frighteningly knowledgeable guides who can run down all the specs on the SR-71 “Blackbird” spy plane.

6 p.m.
2) DINING TROLLEY

The Southern Pacific railroad reached Tucson in 1880, and the moaning whistle of freight and passenger trains can still be heard day and night. For a front-row seat to the passing leviathans, head to the Maynard’s Market and Kitchen (400 North Toole Avenue; 520-545-0577;www.maynardsmarkettucson.com). Less than 50 feet from the tracks, this dark and handsome former depot attracts an upscale crowd that comes for the extensive choice of wines (from the store next door) and the reasonably priced menu. Meat eaters enjoy the 14-ounce dry-aged New York strip ($27), and vegetarians the roast garlic and wild mushroom stone-baked pizza ($10). But just as inviting are the sights and sounds of the rattling plates and glasses.

8 p.m.
3) TUCSON NIGHTS

Tucson has a jumping band scene on weekends, a sleepier one the other five days. On warm nights, the noise of music pumps through the open doors of restaurants and bars along Congress Street. The center of the action is often the historic Rialto Theater (318 East Congress Street; 520-740-1000; www.rialtotheatre.com). A nonprofit showcase vital to downtown’s renewal, it books major acts but has no stylistic agenda (Sonic Youth is playing on Jan. 4, and Cowboy Mouth on Jan. 14).

 

Saturday

9 a.m.
4) ROADRUNNER

When the summer sun isn’t blazing, Tucsonians head outdoors. A prime destination is the Saguaro National Park, which embraces the city on two sides. To walk among fields of multi-armed cactus giants, drive west about a half-hour along a snaking road. Look for an unmarked parking lot a few hundred feet after the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum. This is the start of the King Canyon Trail (www.saguaronationalpark.com/favorite-trails.html), put in by the Civilian Conservation Corps in the 1930s and the path for a refreshing morning hike. A covered picnic area is at mile 0.9. Fitter types can proceed 2.6 miles to Wasson Peak, highest point in the Tucson Mountains.

Noon
5) MODERN MEXICAN

Tucson thinks highly of its Mexican restaurants, perhaps unjustly so. One place they have a right to be proud of is Cafe Poca Cosa (110 East Pennington Street; 520-622-6400; www.cafepocacosatucson.com). Don’t be put off by its location (in an ugly office building) or the décor (a vain attempt to import some glam L.A. style). The chef Suzana Davila has attracted national attention for her novel take on Mexican cuisine, which emphasizes fresh and regional. Try the daily sampler (El Plato Poca Cosa) of three dishes chosen by the chef. It usually has an exotic mole and perhaps a zinger like a vegetarian tamale with pineapple salsa. Lunch is a relative bargain (about $15 for all entrees), but dinner is more expensive (about $26 for entrees). Dinner reservations are essential for weekends.

1:30 p.m.
6) PICTURE THIS

One of the most impressive collections of 20th-century North American photographers can be found at the Center for Creative Photography (1030 North Olive Road; www.creativephotography.org), in a hard-to-find building on the University of Arizona campus. Containing the archives of Ansel Adams, Edward Weston, Garry Winogrand, W. Eugene Smith and more than 40 other eminent photographers, it also runs a first-rate exhibition program. On view through Jan. 31 (free) is a retrospective of the peculiar, self-effacing German émigré John Gutmann.

3:30 p.m.
7) THE BUY AND BUY

Phoenix-style shopping has arrived at La Encantada, a mall in the foothills of the Santa Catalinas, with Tiffany and Louis Vuitton (Skyline Drive and Campbell Avenue.; 520-615-2561; www.laencantadashoppingcenter.com). At the Plaza Palomino (520-320-6344; www.plazapalominotucson.com), local merchants like Enchanted Earthworks (www.enchantedearthworks.com) carry more idiosyncratic items like funky handmade jewelry and crafts.

5 p.m.
8) EYES ON DESERT SKIES

The surrounding mountains are heavenly for star-gazing. The Kitt Peak National Observatory (Tohono O’odham Reservation, 520-318-8726;www.noao.edu), about 90 minutes southwest of the city and 6,900 feet above sea level, says it has more optical research telescopes than anywhere in the world. Aside from serving professional astronomers, it also has generous offerings for amateurs. One of these, the Nightly Observing Program ($48 a person), begins an hour before sunset and lasts four hours with an expert who will show you how to use star charts and identify constellations and will give you a peek through one of the mammoth instruments. (Dinner is a deli sandwich; remember to wear warm clothing.) Reserving a month in advance is recommended, but you may get lucky and find an opening the day of.

11 p.m.
9) MORE COSMOS

For a nightcap, head to the Club Congress (311 East Congress Street; 520-622-8848; www.hotelcongress.com/club), a boisterous joint on the ground floor of the Hotel Congress with five bar areas that offer steeply discounted drinks after 10 p.m. ($3 for shots of Jack Daniels). Live bands often have crowds of dancers spilling out into the lobby of the hotel. Finish the night at Plush (340 East 6th Street; 520-798-1298; www.plushtucson.com), where the acts are less polished but the drinks are almost as cheap and just as strong.

Sunday

9 a.m.
10) EARLY BIRD

The Epic Cafe (745 North Fourth Avenue; 520-624-6844; www.epic-cafe.com) is a happening spot at almost any hour. This neighborhood hub on the corner of University Boulevard is open from 6 a.m. to midnight and serves an eclectic menu of sandwiches, sweets and drinks to a clientele of would-be intellectuals with laptops and dog owners who jam the sidewalk tables. Grab a cup of the excellent coffee ($1.84) and a vegan seed cookie ($2.50). If it tastes like delicious bird food, that’s because it is.

10 a.m.
11) MISSILE AMERICA

For a terrifying yet educational reminder of the cold war, drive about 30 minutes south of downtown on Interstate 19 to the Titan Missile Museum(1580 West Duval Mine Road, Sahuarita; 520-625-7736;www.titanmissilemuseum.org; reservations advised). The nuclear silo housed a single intercontinental ballistic missile equipped with a warhead 700 times more powerful than the Hiroshima bomb. Of the 54 built in the 1960s, it is the only silo that has not been filled in or demolished. The museum tour lasts an hour. Much of it is underground, behind eight-foot-thick blast walls, and ends with a peek at the 103-foot weapon, with its warhead removed.

THE BASICS

Instead of flying into Tucson, frequent visitors often land at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport and drive for two hours along scenic Interstate 10. Phoenix offers more nonstop flights and is often cheaper. A round-trip flight on US Airways from Kennedy Airport in January starts at $351, according to a recent search.

The Ritz Carlton, Dove Mountain (15000 North Secret Springs Drive; 520-572-3000; www.ritzcarlton.com/dovemountain ) opened this month with a 27-hole golf course designed by Jack Nicklaus, a luxurious spa and 253 rooms starting at $299.

The Arizona Inn (2200 East Elm Street; 800-933-1093;www.arizonainn.com) is the granddaddy of Tucson luxury hotels and still family-owned. Spacious standard rooms start at $259.

Budget travelers should be more than happy with the Best Western Royal Sun Inn & Suites (1015 North Stone Avenue; 520-622-8871;www.bwroyalsun.com). Convenient to downtown and the mountains, the hotel offers free Wi-Fi, a small pool and rates starting at $110.

Correction: January 17, 2010 

 

The 36 Hours column on Jan. 3 about Tucson, Ariz., misstated the cross street of the location of one cafe and misstated part of the name of a menu item at another cafe. The Epic Cafe is on the corner of University Boulevard, not University Avenue, and the sampler of three dishes chosen by the chef at Cafe Poca Cosa is called El Plato Poca Cosa, not La Plato Poca Cosa.

Correction: January 31, 2010 

 

The 36 Hours column on Jan. 3 about Tucson misstated the location of a shopping center, the Plaza Palomino. It is north of downtown, not in downtown.

A version of this article appears in print on January 3, 2010, on page TR10 of the New York edition with the headline: 36 Hours in Tucson, Ariz. Order ReprintsToday’s Paper|Subscribe

 

SEE IT ALL:

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/03/travel/03hours.html?smid=fb-share&_r=0

 

 

 

FROM ME:

Phoenix Commercial Real Estate and Investment Real Estate: investors and Owner / Users need to really know the market today before making a move in Commercial Properties or Investment Properties in Phoenix / Tucson / Arizona, as the market has a lot of moving parts today. What is going on socio-economically, what is going on demographically, what is going on with location, with competing businesses, with public policy in general — all of these things affect the quality of selling or purchasing your Commercial Properties, Commercial Investment Properties and Commercial and large tracts of Residential Land in Phoenix / Tucson / Arizona.  Therefore, you need a broker, a CCIM (Certified Commercial Investment Member) who is a recognized expert in the commercial and investment real estate industry and who understands Commercial Properties and Investment Properties.

I am marketing my listings on Costar, Loop-net CCIM, Kasten Long Commercial Group.  I also sold  hundreds millions of dollars’ worth of  Investment Properties / Owner User Properties in Retail, Office Industrial, Multi-family and Land in Arizona and therefore I am working with  brokers, Investors and Developers. I am also a CCIM and through this origination ( www.ccim.com ) I have access to marketing not only in the United States, but also international.  Click here to find out what is a CCIM:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CCIM

1

I am actively looking to build relationships with Real Estate Investors and Owner  Users  for  Retail / Industrial / Office / Multifamily and Land  in  Phoenix  –  Scottsdale   –  Tucson   –  Arizona

http://walter-unger.com/?p=15472

2

Click here to find Reasons to Consider me for Commercial Referrals

http://walter-unger.com/?p=15010

3

Click here to View My Listings and Profile

http://www.loopnet.com/profile/14101172900/Walter-Unger-CCIM/Listings/

4

Click here to find out what is a CCIM:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CCIM

5

Click here to view my website:

http://walter-unger.com/

6

Interactive Map Of All 10+ Unit Apartment Listings in Metro Phoenix

http://www.easymapmaker.com/map/28cb3b8b3206c377a6f282d980dc7974

7

Click here:

3rd QTR 2015  GREATER PHOENIX APARTMENT OWNER’S NEWSLETTER  Kasten Long Commercial Grpup.

8

Click here: No Slowdown in New Construction in Q3 – Apartments

http://walter-unger.com/?p=15073

     9

Click her to join my mailing list :      

http://visitor.r20.constantcontact.com/manage/optin?v=001l2E62PqC4Z3sggwR_1M9aUmjrzvHWmSVEfy9MrVW6ULRJR3XWD1R_98ZLV5AVRdcHcxwR32LZvKqcYEkVDBKEwAuD87hIYmDX8GpVxXVwjc%3D

Walter Unger CCIM –  walterunger@ccim.net   – 1-520-975-5207  –  http://walter-unger.com

2016 Official Arizona Visitors Guide

Visit Arizona

WHY PHOENIX ARIZONA : ???     

 check it out

http://walter-unger.com/?p=13391                     

 

1

Timeline of Phoenix, Arizona history

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Phoenix,_Arizona_history

2

Phoenix, Arizona

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phoenix,_Arizona

 

3

Facts of Arizona – year 1848 to 2013

http://walter-unger.com/?p=9507

Feel free to contact Walter regarding any of these stories, the current market, distressed commercial real estate opportunities and needs, your property or your Investment Needs for Comercial Properties in Phoenix, Tucson, Arizona.

  •  

walterunger@ccim.net 1-520-975-5207

Check out my professional profile and connect with me on LinkedIn.

http://lnkd.in/bezpJ8t

Follow me on Facebook:

https://www.facebook.com/ungerccim

  •  

Follow me on Twitter:

https://twitter.com/Walterunger

Follow Me on Google+

https://plus.google.com/u/0/b/114560883588623379451/

 

Kasten Long Commercial Group tracks all advertised apartment communities, including those advertised by other brokerages.  The interactive map  shows the location of each community (10+ units) and each location is color coded by the size (number of total units). 

Click here for Map of Apartments for Sale (10+units)

  •  

 

Walter Unger CCIM, CCSS, CCLS

I am a successful Commercial / Investment Real Estate Broker in Arizona now for 20 years.  If you have any questions about Commercial / Investment Properties in Phoenix or Commercial /  Investment Properties in Arizona,  I will gladly sit down with you and share my expertise and my professional opinion with you. I am also in this to make money therefore it will be a win-win situation for all of us. 

  •  

Please reply by e-mail walterunger@ccim.net or call me on my cell 520-975-5207

 

www.Walter-Unger.com

 

Walter Unger CCIM

Senior Associate Broker 

Kasten Long Commercial Group

2821 E. Camelback Rd. Suite 600

Phoenix , AZ 85016

Direct:    520-975-5207   

Fax:       602-865-7461

walterunger@ccim.net

www.Walter-Unger.com    

www.KLCommercialGroup.com

View My Listings and Profile

Join My Mailing List

What is a CCIM?

Reasons to Consider me for Commercial Referrals

 

  •  

Delivering the New Standard of Excellence in Commercial Real Estate 

  •  
  • Commercial Real Estate Scottsdale
  • Commercial Real Estate Phoenix
  • Commercial Real Estate Arizona
  • Commercial Investment Properties Phoenix
  • Commercial Investment Properties Scottsdale
  • Commercial Investment Properties Arizona
  • Land Specialist Arizona
  • Arizona Land Specialist
  • Land Specialist Phoenix
  • Phoenix Land Specialist
  • Land For Sale Phoenix
  • Land for sale Arizona
  • Commercial Properties For Sale Phoenix
  • Commercial Real Estate Sales Phoenix
  • Commercial Properties Phoenix
  • Commercial Properties Arizona
  • Commercial Land Specialist Phoenix
  • Commercial Land Phoenix
  • Multifamily land Phoenix
  • Retail Land Phoenix
  • Industrial Land Phoenix
  • Land Commercial Phoenix
  • Land Retail Phoenix
  • Land Industrial Phoenix
  • Land Multifamily Phoenix
  • Industrial Land for sale Phoenix
  • Land Industrial
  • P
  • Investment Real Estate

 

Disclaimer of Liability

The information in this blog-newsletter is for general guidance only, and does not constitute the provision of legal advice, tax advice, accounting services, investment advice, or professional consulting of any kind. The information provided herein should not be used as a substitute for consultation with professional tax, accounting, legal, or other competent advisers. Before making any decision or taking any action, you should consult a professional adviser who has been provided with all pertinent facts relevant to your particular situation. Tax articles in this e-newsletter are not intended to be used, and cannot be used by any taxpayer, for the purpose of avoiding accuracy-related penalties that may be imposed on the taxpayer. The information is provided “as is,” with no assurance or guarantee of completeness, accuracy, or timeliness of the information, and without warranty of any kind, express or implied, including but not limited to warranties of performance, merchantability, and fitness for a particular purpose.