Locations in Phoenix: Slideshow

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  • Arizona Event Center

    1300 S. Country Club Dr. Mesa

    480-779-7716

    Arizona Event Center has been known to host everything from music festivals to rowdy raves. The 30,000-square-foot former nightclub and big-box store has three stages, a full bar for 21-and-over types, and even a mechanical bull (a holdover from a brief stint as a country bar). Its tiny smoking area often gets a little too crowded but allows rave kids the pretense to get closer to partygoers of the opposite sex and offer to clean off some of the excess paint, fake blood, or foam.
    27 articles
  • Arizona Latino Arts & Cultural Center

    147 E. Adams St. Central Phoenix

    602-254-9817

    38 articles
  • Arizona Science Center

    600 E. Washington St. Central Phoenix

    602-716-2000

    This downtown Phoenix museum is pretty much guaranteed to bring out the nerd in anyone. Whether or not you think you care about science, the Arizona Science Museum offers hands-on experiences that make learning about gravity and electric circuits fun for visitors of all ages. With more than 164,000 square feet of space, the museum offers more than enough to entertain the kids for a day – which isn't to say the adults won't enjoy the trip, too. In fact, according to the museum more than half a million guests come to do so each year. Popular permanent exhibits include “All About Me,” an exploration of the body's inner workings that lets guests walk through a “working” stomach and watch surgeries be performed. You can lie on a bed of nails, build your own electric circuit or ride the Evans Family SkyCycle on any given day as well as enjoy the museum's planetarium and IMAX theater.
    1 event 124 articles
  • Arizona State Fairgrounds

    1826 W. McDowell Rd. Central Phoenix

    602-252-6771

    We may not have the newest fairgrounds here in Arizona, but we do have plenty of history behind our west Phoenix locale. The story of the fairgrounds goes way back to the time before statehood in 1912, when a group of volunteers created the Arizona Territorial Fair Association in 1905, bought the current property and developed it. Today at the Arizona State Fairgrounds you'll find a racetrack and the 14,870-seat multipurpose indoor arena, Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum. The saddle-shaped building was constructed between 1964 and 1965 and hosts concerts and sporting events throughout the year. The fairgrounds also hosts the Arizona State Fair every fall as well as the Maricopa County Fair. The Arizona State Fair is considered one of the top five state fairs in the country and draws well over a million attendees each year.
    72 articles
  • ASU Gammage

    1200 S. Forest Ave. Tempe

    480-965-3434

    In 1957 then ASU President Grady Gammage called on famous architect Frank Lloyd Wright to help create a unique auditorium for the university. Originally Wright had the design that would eventually become Gammage Auditorium in mind for Baghdad, Iraq but ended up placing the opera house in Tempe instead. The 3,000-seat performance hall is 80 feet tall and measures 300 by 250 feet, flanked on either side by giant pedestrian bridges. The construction of the $2.46 million building – the only public building Wright designed in the state of Arizona – took 25 months and was completed in September 1964. The multifunctional auditorium can be used for opera, musical and dramatic productions, symphony concerts and lectures. And today, Arizona State University's Gammage is one of the largest university-based presenters of performing arts in the world.
    34 events 142 articles
  • Azteca Bridal

    1010 E. Washington St. Central Phoenix

    602-253-2171

    4 articles
  • Baiz Market

    523 N. 20th St. Central Phoenix

    602-252-8996

    Perhaps the best place in the Valley to go for Middle Eastern groceries, this Central Phoenix market features aisles filled spices, olive oils, freshly made pita bread, produce, and meats. As far as non-perishables go, there's a wide array of compact discs by Middle Eastern musical acts and an impressive selection of hookah pipes and shish (flavored tobaccos). If you're hungry after shopping, be sure to pop into the market's in-house eatery, Al Hana, for shish taook and delicious shwarma sandwiches.
    22 articles
  • Bookmans Entertainment Exchange

    1056 S. Country Club Dr. Mesa

    480-835-0505

    23 articles
  • Calvin Charles Gallery

    4201 N. Marshall Way Central Scottsdale

    480-421-1818

    9 articles
  • Casablanca Lounge

    7134 E. Stetson Dr. Central Scottsdale

    480-970-7888

    12 articles
  • Changing Hands Bookstore

    6428 S. McClintock Dr. Tempe

    480-730-0205

    284 articles
  • CityScape

    1 E. Washington St. Central Phoenix

    480-947-7772

    123 articles
  • Civic Space Park

    424 N. Central Ave. Central Phoenix

    69 articles
  • Clubhouse Music Venue

    1320 E. Broadway Rd. Tempe

    480-968-3238

    67 articles
  • Dos Gringos Mexigrill

    1361 N. Alma School Rd. Chandler

    480-855-3303

    4 articles
  • Dos Gringos Mexigrill

    1958 S. Greenfield Rd. Mesa

    480-633-5525

    4 articles
  • Downtown Phoenix Public Market

    721 N. Central Ave. Central Phoenix

    602-254-1799

    Venture outside while the sun is still out during our summer months? Oh, hell, no. Thankfully, one of Phoenix's biggest and best year-round farmers markets takes place every Wednesday during the slightly cooler and shadier evening hours. Every week produce vendors, bakers, cupcake makers, jam peddlers, jewelry creators, and more come out to sell their goods from 4 to 6 p.m. at the Downtown Phoenix Public Market And don't worry about dinner — food trucks like Hey Joe! and Torched Goodness park their mobile kitchens at the market for your dinnertime enjoyment. The market it also open on Satuday mornings though exact hours vary by season.
    91 articles
  • Dr. A.J. Chandler Park

    3 S. Arizona Ave. Chandler

    480-782-2727

    23 articles
  • Estrella Mountain Regional Park Rodeo Arena

    14805 W. Vineyard Ave. Goodyear

    623-932-3811

    Built in 1981, the Estrella Mountain Regional Park Rodeo Arena is perfect for pretty much any type of equestrian competition or rough stock event. The arean is a full-scale set-up, that's well suited from for amateur, youth, and professional competitors. The lighted arena is equipped with water and power, six bucking chutes, a calf roping chute, North and South stripping chutes, six large holding pens, a warm-up arena, load/unloading chute, restrooms, and announcers stand. Overnight camping available and the two large parking lots can accommodate many trailers.
    3 articles
  • Eye Lounge

    419 E. Roosevelt St. Central Phoenix

    602-430-1490

    This Roosevelt Row gallery has been the “it” place to see and be seen on downtown Phoenix First Fridays for years. eye lounge, an artist-run collective, has been around since 1999 but at its current location since Decemeber 2001. It's a staple in the underground arts scene, a must-see spot on First Fridays and a supporter of Third Friday events as well. They've always got a nice selection of exhibitions going on and have featured rotating murals to showcase those exhibitions in the past. We love to lurk around this contemporary art space not only because of the artistic eye candy, but also because at eye lounge you're almost guaranteed to catch glimpses of – and maybe even interact with – some of the biggest names in the local art scene.
    181 articles
  • Fear Farm

    6801 N. 99th Ave. Glendale

    Spread over a dozen or so buildings of various sizes and 25 acres of cornfield, this attraction will give you a full night of entertainment. The old-school haunted house is well worth the drive from wherever you're coming from since, unlike most other haunted houses these days, Fear Farm is almost 100 percent real people doing the scaring. They aren't relying on any of that animatronics stuff here. Look forward to chainsaw wielding clowns, a blood-splattered asylum and plenty more. And these actors and talented too. They're willing to go the extra mile to make sure you and everyone you're with gets completely scared out of your minds. For example, we've seen a dude with a chainsaw chase a victim, er, guest all the way out to the parking lot.
    42 articles
  • The Firehouse

    1015 N. First St. Central Phoenix

    602-300-7575

    60 articles
  • Four Seasons Resort Scottsdale at Troon North

    10600 E. Crescent Moon Dr. North Scottsdale

    480-515-5700

    27 articles
  • Hazel & Violet

    1301 NW Grand Ave. Central Phoenix

    32 articles
  • Heard Museum

    2301 N. Central Ave. Central Phoenix

    602-252-8840

    From humble beginnings, when the Dwight and Maie Bartlett Heard founded the museum in what was then a small Southwestern town, to the impressive world-class museum it is today, the Heard Museum has come a long way. The Heard opened in 1929 and houses internally recognized collections of Native American artifacts and artwork. You can find century-old Katchina dolls, archives of traditional baskets, paintings, sculptures, jewelry, and clothing all created by members of Native tribes throughout the country. Though the museum aims to educate about the arts, heritage and lives of all the Indigenous peoples of the Americas, the emphasis lies on the American Indian tribes of the Southwestern region. In addition of the high quality collections the Heard offers education programming and festivals. The museum has two locations, one in downtown Phoenix and second in north Scottsdale both of which feature a shop and cafe.
    235 articles
  • HeatSync Labs

    140 W. Main St. Mesa

    602-492-5227

    21 articles
  • Hi Fi Kitchen & Cocktails

    4420 N. Saddlebag Trail Central Scottsdale

    480-970-5000

    11 articles
  • Historic Heritage Square

    115 N. Sixth St. Central Phoenix

    602-262-5029

    77 articles
  • The Hive

    2222 N. 16th St. Central Phoenix

    602-254-1641

    63 articles
  • Hotel San Carlos

    202 N. Central Ave. Central Phoenix

    602-253-4121

    From the rooms named after famous former guests like Marilyn Monroe and Humphrey Bogart to the Hollywood-style stars embedded in the exterior sidewalk, the Hotel San Carlos is proud of its past. But these days, the 83-year-old landmark in downtown Phoenix is probably best known for the various guests who may have checked out — but never really left. Yes, this hotel is a hotbed of haunted apparitions, including the ghost of a heartbroken young woman who jumped (or was pushed) from the roof while dressed in a full evening gown mere weeks after the grand opening. Then there's the basement, which features water wells dating back to 1874, when the site was home to Phoenix's first school house (and supposedly a sacred Native American watering hole before that). Which might explain why many guests report hearing the sounds of children playing in the basement, or even creepier, their screams echoing out of the well shafts.
    32 articles
  • Hotel Valley Ho

    6850 E. Main St. Central Scottsdale

    480-248-2000

    99 articles
  • Montelucia Resort & Joya Spa

    4949 E. Lincoln Dr. Paradise Valley

    480-627-3200

    15 articles