Arizona Office of Tourism

Swimming at Green Valley Recreation

Among the many benefits, Green Valley Recreation offers year around swimming.

 

 

 

 

Evening Skies in Green Valley

Southern Arizona sunsets have a special grandeur.


WELCOME TO GREEN VALLEY

Many of the questions visitors have about our area are answered in Green Valley Arizona at a Glance (see below) and Things to See Around Green Valley in the “Out and About” section. Or go to our "Free Downloads" page to download these documents.

In addition, a list of Green Valley Real Estate and Rental Agencies, Apartments, Contractors, Builders, Developers, Property Managers, Retirement Homes and Assisted Living Facilities can be found on this web site in our directory of members. These businesses are investors in quality community development by their membership in the Green Valley ~ Sahuarita Chamber of Commerce.

For a more comprehensive introduction to the Green Valley area, an information packet can be mailed to you. The contents include a Green Valley map, an Arizona map, the annually published magazine Inside Green Valley, Health Directory, Club Directory, Green Valley Brochure and additional literature in response to specific requests regarding Green Valley and the surrounding area. The cost of the information packet is $5.00 to cover mailing expense.

Simply click on “Contact Us” and complete the provided request form. Or, phone the Chamber Office and Visitor Center any time at 800-858-5872. It will be our pleasure to respond to your inquiry.

AT A GLANCE

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Almost everyone already knows about Tombstone, Arizona, “the town too tough to die.” Now more and more people across the country are hearing about Green Valley, Arizona, a place Arizona Highways described as the “town too good to die... populated by people who have learned
how to live.”

That’s because Green Valley was designed to offer the good life and it does.

Selected as one of the country’s best places to retire to by “Where to Retire” and “New Choices for Retirement” magazines several times, Green Valley, located in the historic Santa Cruz Valley, combines the best of two worlds and four cultures.

The community is part of the original San Ignacio de la Canoa Land Grant from the king of Spain, an area filled with rich history ranging from the Indians who settled the area about 1 A.D. to the conquistadors, missionaries, cowboys, miners and ranchers, and modern day health
seekers.

Green Valley appeals to those who enjoy small-town living, where you know your neighbors, and traffic jams are a rare occurrence.

Yet the retirement community located 23 miles south of Tucson, and 145 miles south of Phoenix, also offers the desirable amenities of city life, including cultural activities, shopping, and a wide range of recreational activities.

Linked to communities both north and south by Interstate 19, Green Valley is bounded by Duval Road on the north, Elephant Head Road on the south, the Santa Cruz River and Madera Reserve on the east and the Sierrita Mountains to the west.

The area is known for its unique blend of Native American, Spanish colonial, Mexican and Anglo cultures. Four flags have flown above the region: Spanish, Mexican, Confederate and American. Located at an elevation of 2,900 feet, at the foot of the ruggedly spectacular Santa
Rita Mountain Range, Green Valley and the surrounding areas are blessed with sunshine more than 300 days a year.

A Prime Attraction

Annual temperatures average 80 degrees during the daytime and 50 degrees at night, making the area a prime attraction for visitors who flock here to enjoy outdoor activities, especially golf, all year long.

The sunny and mild winters, healthful, clean dry air and combination of rolling grasslands, high desert and majestic mountains and canyons also lure hikers, tennis players, bird watchers, bicyclists, horseback riders, and swimmers to visit or, better yet, move to Green Valley each year.

Many are drawn to Green Valley and to nearby Tucson, Tubac and Tumacacori by the historic attractions, which range from early Spanish missions, old mines, ghost towns, sprawling cattle ranches and wildlife preserves to Old West theme parks and artists’ colonies.

Nearby Sahuarita is home to the Titan II Missile Museum, which draws visitors from all over the world to explore what was previously an intercontinental ballistic missile site.

Open daily, the museum offers a guided tour of an underground silo that once housed the largest ICBM ever developed by the United States.

Scenic drives and recreational opportunities abound in the area surrounding Green Valley, including four lakes and Madera Canyon, the “sky island” that ranks as one of the best bird-watching areas in the world.

Astronomy Capital

Also nearby is the Fred Lawrence Whipple/Mount Hopkins Observatory, a world-renowned facility that rests atop the second highest peak in the Santa Rita Mountains. Also close by and contributing to Southern Arizona’s reputation as the “astronomy capital of the world” is Kitt Peak
Observatory, which houses the world’s largest collection of telescopes.

Lovers of art and history are drawn to historic Tubac, the oldest European settlement in the area and a shopper’s paradise with nearly 100 galleries and shops in addition to its historic park and museum.

About 45 miles south of Green Valley are the twin cities of Nogales, Arizona and Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, a favorite of bargain-hunters, that draws visitors from miles around to its hundreds of shops offering goods ranging from leather, pottery, rugs, jewelry, furniture, decorative accessories to arts and crafts.

Nogales, Arizona, with its many lovely homes and historic old courthouse, is the seat of government for Santa Cruz County.

Nearby Patagonia, Sonoita and Elgin offer scenic views of rolling mountain countryside populated by cattle and horse ranches and wine vineyards.

Employment

Major public employers in the Green Valley/Sahuarita area are Pima County with installations at the Pima County Government Center and Pima County Library, the U.S. Postal Service, Continental School District, and Sahuarita Unified School District.

Major private employers in the area are the two copper mines, the home building and real estate industry, the Smithsonian Institution’s Whipple Observatory, Farmers Investment Co., which grows and sells pecans, La Posada at Park Centre one of the largest and finest retirement living the Southwest has to offer, Caterpillar, Inc. Training Center, Safeway, Carondelet Medical, Best Western hotel and the tohono O’odham nation, which recently opened a $52 million casino and entertainment complex, just up the road at interstate 19 and Pima Mine Road.

There are four main shopping centers in the Green Valley-Sahuarita area, with approximately 370 shops.

The Green Valley Chamber of Commerce has a membership roster of more than 450 businesses, including banks, real estate professionals, accounting, legal and title services, doctors, dentists, health care providers, service providers, retail outlets and many more.

Green Valley is primarily a retirement community so much of the community’s income is derived from social security payments, private retirement benefits, investment income and saving.

The median income in Green Valley is $43,000 a year, with 32 percent of residents reporting $50,000 plus annual incomes.

Recreational Facilities

Green Valley offers an abundance of recreational facilities, including nine golf courses, 12 recreation centers, 23 heated swimming pools, shuffleboard, tennis, bocce and racquetball courts. Green Valley Recreation offers numerous activities at its centers, including cultural
events, arts and crafts rooms, sewing room, fitness centers, lapidary, ceramics and woodworking, photography, shuffleboard and billiards and computer instruction.

Medical Facilities

Health care facilities include nearly two dozen adult care homes, two nursing homes, four assisted living centers, a facility for those with memory disorders, including Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s disease, an oncology center, several medical clinics, dental clinics and
ambulances with trained Emergency Medical Technicians and paramedics.

Nearby Tucson offers nearly a dozen hospitals and numerous clinics with their own specialties.

A complete listing of health care providers may be found in the Green Valley News 2003 Health Services Directory.

Green Valley has its own twice-weekly newspaper, the Green Valley News and Sun, and its own radio station, KGVY, A.M., both of which focus on community events. The area is served by seven television channels from Tucson, and cable and satellite TV.

Green Valley is governed by the Pima County Board of Supervisors and served by a Sheriff’s substation. The Green Valley Fire District and Rural/Metro are the two fire departments that serve the area.

The incorporated town of Sahuarita has its own police department.

There are three motels in Green Valley and nearby you can find resort hotels, lodges, bed and breakfasts, RV parks and guest ranches.

Tucson International Airport is located off Interstate 19, about 23 miles north of Green Valley.


GREEN VALLEY WEATHER

At a high desert elevation of 2,900', Green Valley enjoys a cooler climate than either Phoenix or Tucson. Click here for more information about the weather in Green Valley, Arizona including the current temperature and forecast.

POPULATION

1990

1998

2000

Green Valley

20,644

25,504

26,500*

Pima County

666,880
823,900
843,746

Arizona

3,665,228

4,764,025

5,130,632

Sources: AZ Dept. of Economic Security and US Census Bureau *1998 estimate projected from county population growth Rates. The US Census Bureau released its population count for Green Valley as 17,283, a figure local leaders are contesting as too low. Pima County and the AZ Dept. of Commerce have been estimating a population of between 22,000 and 25,000 in Green Valley since 1998, based on such factors as the number of occupied dwelling units and water hookups.

 

GREEN VALLEY LABOR FORCE DATA**

 

1980

1998

2000

Civilian Labor

958

2,474

2,521

Employed

838

2,428

2,424

Unemployment

12.5%

1.8%

3.8%

** Green Valley in mainly a retirement community. Source: AZ Dept. of Economic Security

Inside Green Valley 2003-2004
Used by permission of Green Valley News & Sun

 

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