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Ahwatukee, Phoenix

Ahwatukee, Phoenix

FieldValue
<!-- Basic info ---------------->nameAhwatukee
official_nameAhwatukee Foothills Village
native_name
settlement_typeUrban village
total_type
mottoWarm People, Bright Future
image_skylineFile:231209-2 Ahwatukee and South Mountain.jpg
image_captionDrone photo of Ahwatukee neighborhoods and South Mountain Park, December 2023
image_mapPhoenix Urban Villages Ahwatukee Foothills highlighted.svg
map_captionLocation of the Ahwatukee Foothills highlighted in red.
pushpin_mapArizona#USA
pushpin_label_position
coordinates
<!-- Location ------------------>subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameUnited States
subdivision_type1State
subdivision_name1Arizona
subdivision_type2County
subdivision_name2Maricopa
subdivision_type3City
subdivision_name3Phoenix
leader_title1
demonym
unit_prefImperial
area_footnotes
area_total_sq_mi35.8
area_water_percent
elevation_ft1283
elevation_min_ft
population_as_of2016 Estimate
population_footnotes
population_total83,464
population_density_sq_mi1,783
longEW
postal_code_type85044 / 85045 / 85048
blank_nameGNIS feature ID
blank_info24705
websiteAhwatukee Foothills Village Planning Committee

Ahwatukee Foothills (also Ahwatukee) is an urban village of Phoenix. Ahwatukee is the southernmost part of Phoenix and is considered part of the East Valley region of the Phoenix metropolitan area.

In 2022, Niche rated Ahwatukee "#1 in Best Neighborhoods to Live in Phoenix".

History

Prior to the area's development, the name "Ahwatukee" referred to a now-demolished house which was in an area near Sequoia Trails and Appaloosa Drive, west of the Warner-Elliot Loop. The name is said to derive from a Crow word meaning "house of dreams", however Ahwatukee is not a Crow word.

Beginnings

At least two major thoroughfares in today's Ahwatukee are named after people who claimed lands in the area, in the decades after the signing of the Homestead Act in 1862. Warner Road was named after Samuel Warner of Kansas, while Elliot Road was named after Reginald Elliott of California. Both claimed lands in the area now known as Tempe, Arizona next to Phoenix. A third man, Arthur Hunter, claimed land within an area now known as Ahwatukee. The street known today as 48th Street was, for a time, named Hunter Drive, after Arthur Hunter. In the 1940s the rumor goes, Hunter disassembled and buried in the Ahwatukee desert a Studebaker car purportedly owned by Al Capone.

Ahwatukee ranch

One of the first houses in the area was built by Dr. William Van Bergen Ames, who co-founded Northwestern University's now-closed dental school in Evanston, Illinois. north of Chicago. The house was built on a piece of land measuring over 2000 acres, which was purchased for $4 an acre.

At the time, the Chandler Arizonan newspaper called the house, built in the foothills of the South Mountain, "unmatched in scope and size". The house was noted to be a 12,000 sqft winter residence, designed by prominent Phoenix architect Lester Mahoney, with construction starting in 1921. The house was given the name "The Mystic House" by the Chandler Arizonan, due to its cost, size, and isolated location. The Ames, however, called it Casa de Sueños. They moved into the house on Thanksgiving of 1921, but Dr. Ames died suddenly in February 1922. Ames' wife continued to spend her winters at the house until her death in 1933.

After Ames' wife's death, the Ames' property in Ahwatukee was willed to St. Luke's Hospital. The property was bought by Helen Brinton in 1935, who gave the house (and eventually the area) the name it is known by today (as explained below). Brinton died in 1960 and the house was demolished in 1979.

Proving grounds

In 1946, the International Harvester Company rented land from a United States Army tank testing facility west of today's Lakewood community, for use as truck and heavy equipment proving grounds. The proving grounds eventually grew to over 4,000 acres.

The grounds were designed to stress-test trucks and heavy equipment with, among other things, a 7.5 mi test track, dirt tracks, a special testing area with 20 to 60% grade, service shops, and a runway for company executives. The grounds were sold to a property development company in 1983, due to a combination of economic issues, labor union problems, and a patent infringement judgement against the company. The area is now a part of The Foothills and Club West developments.

Development

The Ahwahtukee Foothills on the south side of the South Mountains, November 2014

Development of Ahwatukee began in 1970, when Presley Development Company led by Randall Presley, bought 2,080 acres of land. The land included Ahwatukee Ranch, then owned by a land syndicate led by an English professor at Arizona State University in Tempe, as well as land owned by a local moving and storage firm. Presley originally planned for the area to be a retirement community, but later devised a mix of retirement living, family living, and light commercial zoning for the area.

Presley Development was noted to have a role in Ahwatukee eventually becoming a part of Phoenix, instead of neighboring Chandler or Tempe through a handshake deal between Maricopa County Supervisor Bob Stark, who was also an attorney with Presley Development, and Phoenix Mayor John D. Driggs. However, Chandler and Tempe officials were noted to have refused offers of annexing Ahwatukee.

Phoenix annexed the area in stages from 1980 to 1987. It has been suggested that Phoenix's annexation of Ahwatukee to a degree affected Tempe's future development. Plans for Ahwatukee were approved by Maricopa County in November 1971, and 17 model homes were opened in an area near 50th Street and Elliot Road in 1973. In the same year as the model homes’ opening, the Arizona State Legislature set aside $5 million to build a prison near the proving grounds. Plans for the prison, however, were later scrapped.

The area's first elementary school, Kyrene de las Lomas Elementary School, opened in 1976 and Mountain Pointe High School opened as the area's first high school in 1991.

Etymology

There are three theories surrounding the name "Ahwatukee", with all three claiming the name has roots in the Crow language. Some stories of the name's origin trace back to Brinton, who chose a Crow-rooted name for her new property due to her time among the Crow Nation tribal members in Wyoming, and the influence it subsequently had on her.

House of dreams

Some sources claim the name is a Crow term for house of your dreams, house of my dreams, or house of dreams Until at least 2006, the Ahwatukee Foothills Chamber of Commerce acknowledged "house of dreams" as the meaning of the area's name. However, according to the Crow language dictionary maintained by the Crow Language Consortium, the Crow word for "house" is ashé, and the Crow word for "dream" is baashíale or balewaashíale.

Land on the other side of the hill

Some sources claim the name is a Crow term for "land on the other side of the hill", based on the Crow word awe chuuke. According to the same Crow dictionary, the word awé means "ground", "land", or "earth", and the word chúuke means "over the ridge", "over the hill", or "the next valley over".

Flat land

According to one source, the name closely resembles a Crow term for "flat land" or "prairie". According to the Crow language dictionary maintained by the Crow Language Consortium, the Crow word for "flat land" is alawachúhke.

Geography

Ahwatukee Mercado, a strip mall on Elliot Road in Ahwatukee, December 2017

The Ahwatukee Foothills Village is bordered by Interstate 10 to the east, South Mountains to the north, and the Gila River Indian Community as well as Loop 202 to the west and south. Ahwatukee is geographically isolated from the rest of Phoenix, and was once seen as appropriate for semi-rural development.

Demographics

Based on 2016 estimates, the Ahwatukee Foothills Village has 83,464 residents. 83% of the population are White, 6.5% are Asian, 5.6% are Black or African American, 1.6% are Native American and 3.3% identify as some other race. 12.3% of the population is Hispanic.

Education

Public

K-8 public school students in the area attend schools operated by the Kyrene School District. Ahwatukee-based schools are 12 out of 25 (48%) of Kyrene's schools. High school students go to one of two area high schools: Desert Vista High School and Mountain Pointe High School. Both schools are operated by the Tempe Union High School District.

Private

There are a number of private schools in Ahwatukee. One of the schools, Summit School of Ahwatukee, is ranked as one of the most expensive private schools in the Phoenix area by The Arizona Republic in 2014.

Infrastructure

Transportation

The community is served by the ALEX neighborhood circulator, which is operated by Valley Metro Bus. Riders, however, have complained of poor service after a new contractor took over the route in 2016. Portions of Ahwatukee are also served by Valley Metro Routes 56-Priest Drive, 108-Elliot Road, 140-Ray Road, 156-Chandler Boulevard/Williams Field Road, and the I-10 East RAPID route.

As a result of having access points only via 48th Street in the northeastern part of the area, and a number of east–west crossings over I-10, Ahwatukee has been called the world's largest cul-de-sac. When Loop 202's South Mountain Freeway segment was built, the area acquired a western gateway, via a series of exits along the southern border of the community.

References

References

  1. "Ahwatukee Foothills Village".
  2. "Ahwatukee Foothills Village Primary Care Area (PCA) Statistical Profile 2016".
  3. {{gnis. 24705. Ahwatukee
  4. (15 April 2016). "Street Scout: Neighborhood guide to Tempe/Ahwatukee". [[The Arizona Republic]].
  5. "Ahwatukee Foothills".
  6. (10 July 2015). "Did You Know: The Word 'Ahwatukee' Has No Meaning". [[KJZZ (FM).
  7. (13 March 2012). "Our state has had some good years, leading to the development of Ahwatukee". [[Ahwatukee Foothills News]].
  8. (5 January 2015). "Lost in translation, Ahwatukee's name was born". [[The Arizona Republic]].
  9. (16 March 2012). "Our state has had some good years, leading to the development of Ahwatukee, part two". [[Ahwatukee Foothills News]].
  10. (12 April 2017). "What happened to the Phoenix Proving Ground near South Mountain?". [[The Arizona Republic]].
  11. (27 April 2012). "Randall Presley: Ahwatukee visionary". [[East Valley Tribune]].
  12. (4 March 2011). "Chandler, Tempe lost Ahwatukee to handshake". [[The Arizona Republic]].
  13. (18 June 2014). "Tempe Rising: The Landlocked College Town Explodes with New Development – as Planned". [[Phoenix New Times]].
  14. (2006). "Metropolitan Phoenix: Place Making and Community Building in the Desert". University of Pennsylvania Press.
  15. "Ahwatukee Board of Management – ABM History".
  16. "Ahwatukee". Phoenix Magazine.
  17. (2006). "Phoenix's Ahwatukee-Foothills". Arcadia Publishing.
  18. (7 April 2006). "Reflecting on what we call Ahwatukee". [[The Arizona Republic]].
  19. "Crow Language Consortium".
  20. "ashé (í)".
  21. "baashíale (i)".
  22. "balewaashíale (i)".
  23. (3 December 2015). "Top 5 names for Phoenix-area cities — and Ahwatukee didn't make the list". [[The Arizona Republic]].
  24. "awé (á)".
  25. "chúuke (a)".
  26. (15 September 2011). "The Everyday Language of White Racism". Wiley-Blackwell.
  27. "alawachúhke (a)".
  28. (24 August 2009). "In The Bedroom". [[NBC News]].
  29. "About Kyrene".
  30. "Kyrene Elementary School Annual Report School Year 2016-2017".
  31. (September 17, 2014). "15 most expensive Phoenix-area private schools". [[The Arizona Republic]].
  32. "Ahwatukee Circulator".
  33. (24 August 2016). "Ahwatukee bus users complain of poor service under new operator". [[Ahwatukee Foothills News]].
  34. "South Mountain Freeway Map".
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