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Posts Tagged ‘Pima County Courthouse’

Historic downtown Roy Place office renovated, dedication on 12/16

Thursday, December 16th, 2010

Roy Place office then

Roy Place office now

Recognize these photos? It was the location of the former Walgreen’s downtown which closed sometime after 2001, but the facade has now been restored, and the building rented to the University of Arizona as a center for “urban design, planning and policy classes” for graduate students. The College of Architecture and Landscape Architecture will be the new tenant, and Pima County is the lessor/owner. Read more in Arizona Daily star article:

http://azstarnet.com/news/local/education/college/article_623b03b1-baae-51db-85ba-8043e142cbfd.html.

Or in UA News (click here).

It was the office of local architect Roy Place, who also built the Pioneer Hotel, Roskruge Elementary and Mansfeld Middle Schools, the St. Benedictine Monastery.

The dedication for this building will be on Thursday, Dec. 16 at 2 p.m. with UA President Robert Shelton and Fred DuVal, a member of the Arizona Board of Regents. The dedication ceremony will be on the NW corner of N. Stone and E. Pennington Street at Jacome Plaza, although this Roy Place building is at that same intersection on the SE corner, 44 N. Stone Avenue.

I used to shop in there at Walgreen’s when I worked downtown on Pennington Street at the Domestic Violence Commission (now defunct). But it’s wonderful to see the original facade restored, especially as it was Roy Place’s architect office, which looked out upon the lovely Pima County Courthouse, which he built in 1929. It is perhaps his most famous building in Tucson.

For website of Pima County Consolidated Justice Courts/Courthouse, click here.

Incidentally I have held court (Small Claims) in that historic courthouse building for the Pima County Consolidated Justice Courts, although our courtroom is now in the La Placita Village down south on Church Avenue.

Benedictine Sisters of Perpetual Adoration celebrate 75 years, with a Mass by Bishop Kicanas

Sunday, November 21st, 2010

St. Benedictine monastery, Tucson

The Benedictine Sisters arrived in Tucson, Arizona from Missouri in August, 1935 (when the population here was only 39,000) and have been praying and worshiping for 75 years since then. Bishop Gerald Kicanas officiated over their celebratory Mass today at their chapel at 800 N. Country Club. Concelebrants were Rev. Pat Crino and Rev. Miguel Mariano. (see correction below in comments)

Bishop Kicanas spoke of St. Benedict‘s teachings saying that he believed that “God is present in every human being, that every person is a gift of God”. He also preached that “community is important, all can be a family/household in Christ.” The Bishop emphasized that Benedict taught that we need to “seek God above all”, as these Benedictine sisters have done for 75 years in Tucson.

St. Benedict, from wikpedia

What I found particularly moving in today’s Mass was hearing the sweet, lovely voices of the Sisters’ Choir, especially singing the communion song’s lyrics “worthy are the ones who believe to receive the goodness of God.”

“The Benedictine Sisters of Perpetual Adoration are a contemporary monastic community with a distinctive dedication to the Eucharist.” Their information card states that they “serve the Church through our contemplative prayer, and witness to God’s presence in our world through community life, hospitality and a ministry of the Word”…

The monastery was build in 1940 by local architect Roy Place, who is perhaps best known for his 1928 Pima County Courthouse downtown. This monastery has also been called “The Pink Rose of the Desert”.

The St. Benedictine chapel is open every day, all day. Learn more about them at www.tucsonmonastery.com, phone 520-325-6401, email: osbtucson@benedictinesisters.org. They have very nice items for sale in their gift shop, which is also open every day.

I wrote about them last November, 2009 when they hosted the Tucson Boys Choir concert there (click here).

Tucson Meet (eat, & greet) Yourself on October 8 to 10

Wednesday, October 6th, 2010

37th Annual Tucson Meet Yourself, Friday October 8 & Saturday October 9, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. and Sunday October 10, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

The Driving force behind this folk festival is Mia Hansen, Executive Director (520) 370-0588, mia@tucsonmeetyourself.org (whom I just met last weekend at the Pima County Courthouse where the Folk Arts Market will be).

There will be six Festival areas this year:
1. Key Ingredients in El Presidio Park;
2. Meet Our Heritage in Jacomé Library Plaza;
3. Meet Your Soul in La Placita Village;
4. Pima County Meet Yourself in the Pima County Administration Building/Surrounding Areas;
5. Traditions of Home and Games People Play in Tucson Convention Center (TCC) Plaza; and
6. Meet the Street area on Church Street

Website: www.tucsonmeetyourself.org for lots more photos and event information, including the daily performance schedules. Plus see event map below.

Admission is free to Tucson Meet Yourself. Over 75,000 people attended the 2009 festival, and donations are needed to offset costs. Look for volunteers with orange buckets asking for your financial help again this year.

crowd at Tucson Meet Yourself by Pima County Courthouse

Board of Directors of Tucson Meet Yourself

JAMES GRIFFITH, Ph.D., Founder, Research Associate, University of Arizona Southwest Center
MARIBEL ALVAREZ , Ph.D., Chairwoman, Research Social Scientist/Folklorist -University of Arizona
CELESTINO FERNÁNDEZ, Vice Chair, Ph.D., Distinguished Outreach Professor, University of Arizona
ROBERT SHATZ, Treasurer, COO, Innovative Technologies Development Center
RICHARD NOEL, Aerospace engineer
CARMEN BONILLAS, Teacher/Tucson Unified School District
SHIRAZ ALI PEERA, Coldwell Banker Residential
RALPH COLWELL, Commercial Real Estate Investor
DON LURIA, Slow Food Tucson

official map