Search results
Results from the Health.Zone Content Network
Pima County Natural Resources, Parks and Recreation ... The agency was established by the county as the Parks and Recreation Department in 1947 with the intended goal ...
Rillito River Park. Rillito River Park is a 12-mile-long linear park in Tucson, Arizona, that runs along the north and south banks of the Rillito River from Interstate 10 to North Craycroft Road. [ 1] The park is part of The Loop, a network of linear parks serving Tucson and its suburbs. At its west end, the Rillito trail passes under ...
1985. (1985) Operated by. Pima County Natural Resources, Parks and Recreation. Open. 7:00 AM - Sunset. Status. open all year. Roy P. Drachman-Agua Caliente Regional Park is a 101 acres (41 ha) regional park in northeastern Tucson, Arizona.
Valley of the Moon (Tucson, Arizona) Categories: Parks in Arizona by county. Protected areas of Pima County, Arizona.
Tucson Parks and Recreation Gene C. Reid Park is a 131-acre urban park in central Tucson, Arizona that includes a 9,500-seat baseball stadium, an outdoor performance center, two man-made ponds, public pools, and a 24-acre zoo along with playgrounds, gardens and picnic areas. [ 1 ]
Sun Circle. / 32.301024; -111.0075825. The Sun Circle is a sculpture located within the Rillito River Park, a Pima County linear park running along the banks of the Rillito River north of Tucson, Arizona. Inspired by the archaeoastronomy of the southwestern United States Ancestral Puebloans in locations such as Chaco Canyon, Sun Circle uses ...
Himmel Park is a 24.3 acres (9.8 ha) urban park in central Tucson, Arizona.The park's facilities include the Himmel Park Branch Library, [1] a grass amphitheater, two playgrounds, a swimming pool, eight lighted tennis courts, and a multipurpose grass playing field area large enough to accommodate four full-size soccer fields.
It includes land in both Pima County and Santa Cruz County. [2] Plans for a National Heritage Area in the Santa Cruz watershed began in the early 2000s, [3] and were first introduced to state legislature in 2007. [4] The area was made official in 2019 after the passing of the John D. Dingell Jr. Conservation, Management, and Recreation Act. [5]