place

Phoenix Rising Soccer Complex at Wild Horse Pass

2021 establishments in ArizonaBuildings and structures in Chandler, ArizonaGila River Indian CommunityPhoenix Rising FCSoccer venues in Arizona
Sports venues completed in 2021USL Championship stadiums

Phoenix Rising Soccer Complex at Wild Horse Pass is a soccer complex including the Wild Horse Pass Stadium, a soccer-specific stadium near Chandler, Arizona. It is the former home of Phoenix Rising FC of the USL Championship. The stadium was completed before the start of the 2021 USL Championship season. The stadium was built on land in the Gila River Indian Community, near Interstate 10 and Loop 202. The complex has 10,000 seats with a video board, press box, improved sound, a family-friendly general admission section, ticket office, locker rooms, two practice fields, and a on-site administrative office.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Phoenix Rising Soccer Complex at Wild Horse Pass (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Phoenix Rising Soccer Complex at Wild Horse Pass
Siylo Yog East Loop Road,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Phoenix Rising Soccer Complex at Wild Horse PassContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 33.270833333333 ° E -111.97638888889 °
placeShow on map

Address

Siylo Yog East Loop Road
85236
Arizona, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Share experience

Nearby Places

House of the Future (Phoenix)
House of the Future (Phoenix)

The House of the Future also known as the Ahwatukee House of the Future is an example of a home of the future located in Ahwatukee, an urban village in Phoenix, Arizona. The idea was originated by Randall Presley, the developer of Ahwatukee to promote his then-new development and bring more residences to the then-less populated Ahwatukee neighborhood. The House was designed by Charles R. Schiffner Taliesin Associated Architects of the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation in Scottsdale, who got inspiration from his drawings of one of his box projects originally intended for Mr. and Mrs. Wright. It was opened for tours in 1980; tours cost $3. Between 1980 and 1984 the House attracted approximately 250,000 people, who were also given tours of various model homes in the development. After four years the House was sold, and is now in private ownership, having changed hands several times.The House was "the first microprocessor controlled house". Designed in coordination with Motorola it had multiple Motorola MC6800 microprocessors that "opened and closed windows, adjusted blinds, and stored tax records, shopping lists, and video games." The system consisted of ten microprocessors, and cost $30,000 in 1980 dollars.The three-bedroom house had an unconventional design. "Most of it is below ground. It includes a two-storey 'atrium', or sky-lobby, from which all the rooms lead off. This contains plants and provides a central conversation area." "Dozens of companies helped build the property at an estimated cost of more than $2 million, a portion of it in donated materials."When it opened the house became a media sensation. “It was covered in periodicals, the media of the time, in 33 different countries. It became a world-famous house, in essence.”