Posts Tagged ‘Arizona real estate’

Arizona is Home to Cacti but also Camels

Wednesday, June 22nd, 2011

If you are thinking of moving to Arizona, looking at real estate or Arizona homes for sale, then chances are you are also interested in learning some of the history of this great state. Arizona, the Grand Canyon State, is a land filled with not just magnificent scenery and beautiful homes, but also dramatic legends – some based on fact, some based on fiction and some based on dreams. The story that many people have heard about camels making a home in Arizona and carousing across the desert is, in fact, based on facts.   

Let’s start out in Quartzsite, Arizona, about half-way between Phoenix and the California border along I-10. Quartzsite is located about 125 miles from Phoenix and almost 300 miles from Tucson. The town is now home to a wealth of winter residents, and it’s also where numerous well-attended gem and mineral shows take place every year. But over one hundred years ago, Quartzsite was where camels met cacti.  



According to Arizona Oddities, the thing most people notice right away when they enter the Quartzsite Pioneer Cemetery is a stone pyramid topped by a copper camel, and there’s quite a story behind its presence. The cairn marks the gravesite of a famed camel driver known as “Hi Jolly,” whose birth name was Philip Tedro, a Greek born in Syria. As an adult, Tedro had converted to Islam and changed his name to Hadji Ali.  

Hadji Ali came to the United States in the 1850s or 1860s (various reports have different dates) to act as a camel driver for the U.S. Army which was in the midst of an ill-fated attempt to use the animals as “beasts of burden” for military purposes in the deserts of the Southwest. Once here in Arizona, the locals had a ton of trouble pronouncing “Hadji Ali” so they shortened it to Hi Jolly.  

Hi Jolly served with the Army until the camel experiment was abandoned and the camels were either sold off to private enterprises or turned loose in the desert. One of camels became known as the Red Ghost, and legend has it that when Hi Jolly died, he was out in the desert hunting for the renegade animal. No one knows for sure if that’s true, but it does make for an interesting story.  

Hi Jolly died near Quartzsite in 1902, and in 1934, in recognition of his service to the U.S. Army, the Arizona Department of Transportation erected a monument over his grave. His memory is preserved every year when Quartzsite stages Hi Jolly Days and Camelmania in his honor.

Photo by Jeremy Butler

Water Provided to Arizona Homes by Roosevelt Dam

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

Central and southern Arizona is home to a plethora of vibrant cities and towns where luxury Arizona homes and real estate are part of the fabric of life, but without water, much of this area would still be arid desert. Centuries ago, Native Americans started the first irrigation and canal systems, and in more modern times, the capture, storage and distribution of water has continued to play a central role in the growth of Arizona.

The Roosevelt Dam is located about 76 miles northeast of the Phoenix, Arizona metropolitan area. According to Arizona Oddities, at the time the dam was built, the area had more than 13,000 square miles of watershed from the mountains and the Mogollon Rim. No other large valley in the West came close to the magnitude of watershed available, and that’s why, following the National Reclamation Act of 1902, this particular location was chosen for Roosevelt Dam. Named for President Theodore Roosevelt, construction on the dam began in 1905 and was completed in 1911 at a cost of $10 million. The debt to the federal government was repaid in full in 1955.  

Roosevelt Dam was the first major reclamation project in the West and was probably the most significant event in the entire history of the Salt River Valley. Before the dam was built, settlers would often have to leave during times of drought, but the dam’s creation provided a reservoir of lifesaving water.  

Once the world’s highest masonry dam, Roosevelt Dam forms Roosevelt Lake which has a shoreline of 128 miles and a length of just over 22 miles. Its capacity is approximately 1.6 million acre-feet and its surface acreage, when full, is about 21.5 acres. The maximum depth of Roosevelt Lake is 188 feet.*  

The Salt River Project (SRP), a quasi-governmental agency, manages the dams and lakes. In 1996, SRP completed a $430 million modification project on Roosevelt Dam, expanding Roosevelt Lake’s storage capacity by 20 percent.  

(*Source: www.srp.net)  

Gold Canyon Arizona Offers Laid Back Upscale Lifestyle

Tuesday, May 17th, 2011

The Superstition Mountains rise majestically 3,000 feet above the floor of a desert wilderness, separating urban hustle and bustle from the desert stillness, protecting a veritable horde of ancient treasures — artifacts of the long-ago Pima and Apache Native Americans, remnants of the Spanish conquistadors, and most notably, the unimaginable fortunes locked deep inside Jacob Waltz’s long-lost gold mine, a cache of riches that still waits to be discovered.  

Thousands still search for that Lost Dutchman Gold Mine, but thousands more know the real treasures to be found today lie in Gold Canyon, the aptly-named upscale Arizona real estate community that’s home to no fewer than five championship 18-hole golf courses, a burgeoning, active arts community, and growing neighborhoods with exceptional homes to accommodate a range of lifestyles and prices.  

These neighborhoods fit snugly within the foothills of the mountains, a protected preserve to remain unsettled forever. Homeowners revel in daily life that presents incomparable views from every perspective, along with incomparable choices in outdoor activities. There are ghost towns and historical museums to explore, vast, wide-open hiking and riding trails among the sage and saguaro, outstanding golf courses to challenge, boating or fishing at nearby Canyon Lake and Apache Lake, driving the wonderfully scenic Apache Trail that leads to Apache Lake and Roosevelt Lake, or luxuriating in the pampering of a resort pool or day-spa.  

Gold Canyon’s Arts Council presents regular exhibitions and an annual festival featuring local and regional artists, and shopping is plentiful and easily accessible along U.S. 60. Arizona’s annual Renaissance Festival, held every February and March, enlivens Gold Canyon with music and medieval revelry under the watchful eye of the magnificent mountains.  

Life in Gold Canyon is laidback, easy and accented with the electric blue of the infinite Arizona sky, ideal year-round weather that affords time for a wealth of outdoor enjoyment, and the most spectacular crimson-hued sunsets that, daily, give way to a shimmering starry sky above.  

Want a Small Town Feel? Check Out Gilbert Arizona Real Estate

Wednesday, May 11th, 2011

Gilbert Arizona is a modern-day study in contrasts, with a few farmhouses that hearken back to the old days of an agricultural haven to marvelous master-planned Arizona real estate communities that pay tribute to days gone by – and those who lived there – through their names, such as Morrison Ranch and Finley Farms.  

According to the Gilbert Historical Museum, the most recent, rich history behind Gilbert began around the early 1890s, when the first homesteaders consisted of four women and six men. Some of the land in the area was given away free of charge to homesteaders willing to remain on the land for a minimum of five years, while other land was sold for as little as 50 cents an acre. Back then, farm work was done with a horse, roads weren’t paved, and everyone swam in irrigation ditches to stay cool.  

While the exact date of the town’s founding isn’t clear – according to the museum, the earliest homestead was purchased in 1893, but the town’s website says it was developed in the late 1890s – Gilbert was established around the turn of the century as a train station. The story, according to the town website, is that around 1902, area homesteader William “Bobby” Gilbert allowed the Arizona Eastern Railway to establish a rail siding on his land for a line between Phoenix and Florence. Gilbert grew from there, although the town wasn’t officially incorporated until 1920.  

In the meantime, the charming little farming community was flourishing, in fact, the museum website notes the first school opened in 1900. The first grocery store, Ayer’s, came along in 1910 and became the site of the local post office two years later. In 1913, Gilbert’s own railroad depot was constructed; everything from cattle to sheep to watermelons went through it. Also that year, an elementary school known as “the Alamo” was built at Gilbert and Elliot roads; today, that old schoolhouse – which only went out of service in 1977 – houses the Gilbert Historical Museum.  

Gilbert remained a small farming hub on the outskirts of Phoenix for decades. Then, in the 1970s, the Town Council annexed 53 square miles of county land and the town’s size and outlook changed. To wit: In 1970, Gilbert had a population of 1,970. But by 1980, that figure had risen to 5,717; by 2009, it was approximately 215,000. Yet, in spite of its rapid growth, the town has managed to honor its past, celebrating small-town goodness and a family-friendly focus.  

Interesting factoid: One of Gilbert’s most notable achievements was being dubbed the “alfalfa hay capital of the world”, a moniker that was given to the town in about 1918. Indeed, during World War I, Gilbert was a main hay supplier for the U.S. Army’s horses.

Arizona Home to a Vast Medical System

Monday, February 28th, 2011

Arizona houses many state-of-the-art medical facilities, some of which attract people from all over the world who travel here to receive top-notch medical care.   Perhaps the best-known facility is the Mayo Clinic, which is world-renowned for its outstanding level of patient services. Thousands of people every year come to the Mayo Clinic to be treated for a variety of health care ailments ranging from cardiac care to cancer. Some patients are evaluated and treated all in one day and are then sent home, and others require a stay at the Mayo Clinic Hospital, which is on the Phoenix campus.  

Additional medical options in Arizona include those found throughout the Banner Healthcare system, in fact, Banner Health hospitals operate over 30 facilities ranging from large hospitals to smaller clinics, some of which are urgent- and same-day locations. Banner Desert in Mesa, Banner Thunderbird in Glendale, Banner Ironwood in Queen Creek (southeast of Phoenix) and Banner Estrella in west Phoenix are four hospitals that offer high quality medical treatments to their patients. Meanwhile, St. Joseph’s Hospital near downtown Phoenix is also extremely well-known for its outstanding healthcare, in fact, U.S. News & World Report’s annual listing of top hospitals routinely ranks St. Joseph’s in the top 10 for neurology and neurosurgery. The hospital is home to Barrow Neurological Center, several Centers of Excellence in various specialties, and a busy Trauma Center that handles everything from gunshot wounds to traffic accident victims to drownings/near drownings.  

From obstetricians and gynecologists to dermatologists, oncologists and endocrinologists, specialists abound in Arizona, and it is easy to locate a doctor who can help you with a specific health condition. For very focused needs, Cancer Treatment Centers of America recently opened a facility in Goodyear called Western Regional Medical Center. An easy freeway drive from Scottsdale and Phoenix, the facility is known for its leading-edge cancer care.  

Children who require intensive or specialized medical treatment will often go to Phoenix Children’s Hospital in Phoenix. The colorful building is staffed with kid-friendly doctors and nurses who do everything they can to make a child’s visit as stress-free and pleasant as possible. Along with its downtown location, the hospital also has two satellite offices that offer follow-up appointments, checkups and urgent care options.  

Throughout Arizona, you will also find numerous smaller medical clinics and Urgent Care facilities. In addition, some national chain drug stores like Walgreens and CVS offer walk-in medical clinics located right inside many of their stores.

Flagstaff Arizona Home to Old West History

Tuesday, February 15th, 2011

Visitors come from around the world to experience Flagstaff’s sense of the Old West, outdoor adventures and the town’s amazing history, architecture and eclectic culture. Known as the Gateway to the Grand Canyon, Flagstaff Arizona real estate rests along the foothills of the San Francisco Peaks, an intimate and cozy town rich in Western and Native American history. Home to Northern Arizona University, internationally renowned Lowell Observatory, several museums and half a dozen parks, Flagstaff overflows with a plethora of possibilities in recreation, entertainment and culture.  

The iconic scenery of the American West frames life in Flagstaff – the high desert accented with oak, elm and pine trees provides a stunning backdrop for skiing to snowboarding, shopping to symphonies, canyon-rafting to rock-climbing, hiking to biking and so much more. Bordered by the famed “Mother Road,” Route 66, Flagstaff’s ambience neatly weaves an energetic emphasis on a magnificent four-seasons with an innate artistic presence.  

Annual celebrations contribute greatly to Flagstaff’s community energy, drawing residents and tourists alike to activities such as movies on the square on warm summer evenings, the Festival of Science featuring exciting presentations from Lowell Observatory on heavenly skies and stars, and Route 66 days recalling the great era of road travel. In addition, there’s the wildly popular New Year’s Eve Pinecone Drop, which is the prelude to Winterfest, a grand month-long celebration of snow incorporating art, dining, music and every possible snow-time adventure, including sled-dog races.  

Panoramic mountain meadows and endless sunny days and star-filled nights combine with Flagstaff’s active sense of small-town community to sing an enticing siren song of relocation. Flagstaff real estate offers many impressive homes set against marvelous mountain landscapes, as well as private, gated communities with a multitude of luxurious options.  

A little history: Flagstaff got its beginning in 1871 when Edward Whipple, the first known settler in the area, arrived and began to operate a saloon. The next known settler wouldn’t arrive until 1876, when F.F. McMillen settled in the area north of present day Flagstaff. A few months later, a group of scouts and settlers who were traveling from Boston came across an open valley with a lone pine tree which they turned into a makeshift flagpole for their American flag. The group continued westward, but the flag staff from which the city would later get its name remained. In 1891, Flagstaff was named the seat of Coconino County; it was incorporated as a town in 1894 and as a city in 1928.

Love Shopping? Arizona Has the Best Around

Tuesday, February 8th, 2011

When it comes to shopping in Arizona houses literally something for everyone. Chock-full of options from high-end, high-fashion stores to outlet malls offering designer duds for next to nothing, Arizona’s numerous indoor shopping venues provide visitors and residents plenty of cool (literally and figuratively) options to being outside during the warm summer months.  

Let’s start in central Scottsdale, where Scottsdale Fashion Square boasts dozens of shops from sleek and chic clothing boutiques to nationally-known anchor stores. It’s also a great place to people-watch—grab a table in the large food court and you might even see a local celebrity walk by. Meanwhile, downtown Scottsdale is where you’ll find authentic décor, jewelry and clothing, along with chi-chi galleries and quaint eateries – all with a distinctive Southwestern-style flair.  

Home to Arizona State University, Tempe’s most trendy shopping district is definitely all along Mill Avenue, a street that is alive with shops, cafes and more. Easy to navigate by foot, the area is home to many historic buildings dating back to the late 1800s, so it’s an interesting place to take a stroll even if you’re just in the mood for window-shopping.  

Just north of Phoenix, Outlets at Anthem features over 70 stores, many of them popular names such as Nike, Calvin Klein, Guess and the Gap, while in the northern part of Arizona, Sedona is also home to a small outlet mall. Speaking of Sedona, this picturesque and ultra-charming town is famous for its gorgeous red-rock formations, but it is also host to an amazing selection of shopping options, including beautiful art galleries showcasing the work of local artisans as well as national figures.  

If you’re in the southern part of the state, Tucson is home to a plethora of upscale stores and shops that dot the city’s sprawling landscape. In fact, Tucson’s Foothills Mall contains over 90 stores, a fifteen-screen multiplex cinema, a food court with cuisine from around the world, and more. Open daily, the Foothills Mall even has a Kids Play Area to offer some entertainment for your little ones.

When To Change Your Arizona Real Estate List Price

Wednesday, December 29th, 2010

Real estate is about people. Business in general is tough, and selling your home carries with it some pretty hard decisions. So understanding how to disconnect with personal emotions is necessary to increase the probability of selling your house.  

Sellers often base their price point on the amount they would like to net from the sale of their home, and before the real estate bust, this thought process worked. It’s interesting that “fair market value” used to reference the “most probable price” that a willing buyer would pay a willing seller, but Arizona real estate case law now indicates that “fair market value” is actually the highest price which a property could generate. However, in today’s market many homeowners are mistakenly over-pricing their homes, and many have made the mistake of trying to recoup the dollar amount spent on improving their property and basing the list price on this factor. Remember to keep in mind that sometimes it’s a buyers’ market and sometimes it’s a sellers’ market, and somewhere in between, there is a balance but always-changing market. As a seller, one must be informed and guided on what is selling in the surrounding area and for how much, even though each property is valued on its individual characteristics.  

Ultimately it’s the seller’s decision, but understand that every seller must be properly informed and guided on their home’s price-point. Sometimes it’s not what you do, but how you do it that matters most. If the seller and their agent remember that real estate is about people, and understand the home is a marketable commodity, then a successful sale should be the end result. However, when a seller decides to overprice their home in the beginning, then more often than not, one will end up settling for a much lower price in the end. If a home sits on the market too long, buyers may think there is something wrong with the property and avoid previewing it all together. Buyers believe that if sellers would be willing to sell for much less than their list price, then the logical thing for them to do would be to just simply lower the price.  

Today’s home prices are driven by buyers who want a good deal, and by sellers who believe their home is worth more than the market will bear. Somehow a seller must be realistic and find a neutral price-point to list their home and not just ask whatever they want. Sellers must take the time to learn the market, and this can be done by reviewing a Competitive Market Analysis (CMA) of the home they are planning to put up on the market. As sellers, they must be willing to take this valuable information to heart and act accordingly on the CMA’s end results. This seems in keeping with reality that a seller’s property will appraise for this same price per square-foot because of the Sales Comparison Approach, which says the value is derived by comparing the property to similar properties that have been sold recently, and applying appropriate adjustments to the sales price of the comparisons.  

Intangible property values include the analysis of the neighborhood including analysis of access, school systems, municipal services and similar factors. This is an important element of assessing value because these are value-influencing factors. In addition, the subject property analysis must be valued based upon its individual characteristics, or that the land and homes are unique and no two properties are the same. There are countless potential distinctions between residential homes, but in the end, real estate is about people.

rl0z1

Phoenix Was Home to Tuberculosis Patients

Sunday, December 12th, 2010

One prominent thoroughfare running through the Phoenix, Arizona real estate is named “Bethany Home Road” – but is there, or was there, a place actually called “Bethany Home”?   Yes, folks, indeed, there was – and it had something to do with a very nasty disease called tuberculosis, or TB.  

TB was, unfortunately, fairly prevalent back in the day – it was also extremely debilitating, often fatal, and highly contagious. The disease presented itself with a hacking cough which made it critical to keep sufferers isolated to ensure their coughing didn’t infect others. Ergo, tuberculosis sanitariums, or hospitals/clinics, were used to isolate patients.  

As Arizona Oddities describes it, tuberculosis was also big business in Arizona. In the early 1900s, tuberculosis patients routinely were sent to Arizona to be cured by the clean, dry air. Sometimes this worked and sometimes it didn’t, but since antibiotics weren’t around, a hot, dry climate was considered one of the best potential curatives for not only TB, but also for various allergies and lung-related ailments such as asthma.  

The Sunnyslope area — which then was well north of the Phoenix city limits — was the site of many tuberculosis sanitariums, and Scottsdale was actually once known as “White City” because of all the white tents where tuberculosis patients lived. Between historians Marshall Trimble and, Dick Lynch, Arizona Oddities explains it this way.  

“Bethany” is an ancient town near Jerusalem at the foot of the Mount of Olives and a religious organization appropriated the name for a tuberculosis sanitarium operated in the early 1900s. It was located near what is now 15th Avenue and Bethany Home Road. Voila – hence, the name.   As an aside, according to Enotes.com, streptomycin, an original antibiotic, was produced in quantity in 1944, helped to treat such lethal diseases as tuberculosis, typhoid fever, bubonic plague and bacterial meningitis. Although streptomycin saved numerous lives, it was eventually found to be unsafe and removed from the market in favor of newer, safer antibiotics, such as sulfa drugs and penicillin.  

As our late, great friend Paul Harvey would say, and now you know the rest of the story.  

rl0z1

Information used with permission. Source: Arizona Oddities



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Abundant Schooling Opportunities For Phoenix Homes

Saturday, November 13th, 2010

Living in Phoenix, Arizona real estate, you will certainly have plenty of great choices when it comes to schools, whether you are needing elementary, high school or post-secondary.  

To begin with, Phoenix alone has 325 public elementary and high schools and more than 200 charter schools in 30 school districts. Private schools and academies, some affiliated with faith communities, add another layer to the diversity of available schooling options. Nearby Scottsdale, Cave Creek and Paradise Valley School Districts overlap some Phoenix boundaries, so it bears checking into those options when doing your research.  

In addition to the wealth of choices in the lower grades, educational opportunities abound for both college-degree-seekers and those whose talents draw them to technical or specialty training. For example, a robust community college system exists, with ten institutions making up the Maricopa County Community College system. One of the most popular choices for a broad-based university education in the Phoenix area is definitely Arizona State University, which has four campuses located throughout the valley. The main campus is in Tempe, with additional campuses located in downtown Phoenix, northwest Phoenix (near Glendale), and Mesa. With a total enrollment of more than 67,000 students, ASU is one of the largest universities in terms of student population in the United States.  

The University of Arizona, whose main campus is in Tucson, has established a College of Medicine in downtown Phoenix. Grand Canyon University and The American Indian College offer yet more post-secondary choices, while the world-renowned Thunderbird School of Global Management in Glendale attracts students from around the world to its graduate Business programs.  

Meanwhile, online or on-campus degree programs can be taken through the University of Phoenix, an institution that bills itself as the largest private university in North America, but if your heart is truly in the kitchen, the Scottsdale Culinary Institute, the Arizona Culinary Institute and The Art Institute of Phoenix can all whip you into chef-shape with their award-winning programs of study. rl0z1