Tucson House

Tucson House is a modern residential high-rise that was completed in 1963. The tower is one of the taller buildings in Tucson, Arizona. The building rises 195 feet and has 17 floors. Tucson House was designed by Chicago developers to be a luxury high-rise apartment building, and was the most luxurious residential building in Tucson at that time. It is currently owned by the City of Tucson and utilized as public housing[1]

Tucson House
Tucson House Apartment building
General information
StatusComplete
TypeResidential
Location1501 North Oracle Road
Tucson, Arizona, United States
Coordinates32.240246°N 110.97909°W / 32.240246; -110.97909
Construction started1960
Completed1963
Opening1963
OwnerCity of Tucson
Height
Roof195 ft (59.4 m)
Technical details
Floor count17
Lifts/elevators3
Design and construction
ArchitectNicholas G. Sakellar
Other information
Number of rooms408

Overview

Tucson House was designed in 1960 by Chicago developers to be a luxury high-rise apartment building. The building was completed in 1963, and at the time it opened, was the most luxurious residential building in Tucson.[2] It was featured in Time Magazine and TV Guide. Units had views to either the north or south, and the entire exterior living room walls opened with sliding doors to balconies. Advertisement brochures for the property described this high-rise apartment house as "a city within a city." Amenities included limousine service, game, recreation, and arts and crafts rooms, beauty shop, barber shop, Laundromat, Olympic sized swimming pool, sauna, ornate lobby, three elevators, extensive security measures, and the 17th floor "penthouse indoor-outdoor solarium.” U.S. Congressman Morris K. Udall was a resident for 2 years during the 1960s.[3] It was also the tallest building in Tucson from 1963-1967, and is still the tallest residential building in Tucson.

Even with its unparalleled amenities and initial popularity, the creation of Interstate 10 approximately one mile to the west in the early 1960s proved to be detrimental to Tucson House. The creation of Interstate 10 meant that most traffic bypassed the city core and severely curtailed in-town through traffic. The popularity of many motels and businesses along the once-booming Oracle Road collapsed, and the marketplace dramatically transformed within a decade. By the mid 1970s, Tucson House occupancy declined as the Oracle Area continued to deteriorate, and the federally insured mortgage was foreclosed. The property was auctioned in October 1976 to HUD, which provided a grant to the City of Tucson to purchase it.[4] In 1979, the City of Tucson acquired the 408-unit Tucson House complex and converted it to public housing for the elderly and disabled.

In 2016, a faulty water valve caused residents to be without water for more than 24-hours.[5]

The Blue Moon community garden is in the rear of Tucson House.

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gollark: Specifically factorials up to 7! or so, it's computationally intractable and/or overflows Discord messages beyond that.
gollark: Oh, I can have it generate a convenient formula for factorials too!
gollark: Hmm, Desmos is fine with the simplified version, fun.
gollark: It's not some sort of optimizer thing, it's literally just Lagrange interpolation bodgily implemented in TypeScript.

References

http://tucsoncitizen.com/morgue/2006/06/23/16879-new-lives-at-tucson-house/ http://www.tucsonweekly.com/tw/03-12-98/curr2.htm http://www.tucsonaz.gov/files/preservation/Oracle_Area_Context_Study.pdf

Preceded by
Transamerica Building
Tallest Building in Tucson
1963—1967
195ft
Succeeded by
Pima County Legal Services Building
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