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The Albuquerque Public Library opened on May 1, 1901, replacing the Ladies' Library Association which had operated sporadically since 1883. The new library was located in Perkins Hall, a three-story brick building at the intersection of Central and Edith which had previously housed the first Albuquerque Academy and the University of New Mexico.
The Main Library is a public library in Downtown Albuquerque, New Mexico and the main branch of the Albuquerque Bernalillo County Library system. Opened in 1975, it was designed by local architect George Pearl and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2019. [3]
Albuquerque Public Library: Albuquerque Public Library. August 19, 2024 423 Central Avenue N.E. ... Albuquerque: 4: Juan Cristobal Armijo Homestead: September 30, 1982
Oct. 17—Visitors have a new way to get down the hill at Juan Tabo Hills Park. The park earlier this month introduced the 50-foot-high, 100-foot-long slide — the longest slide in New Mexico ...
Lomas/Juan Tabo: arrested "man was not cooperating with officers' requests to come out of a vehicle" [94] September 30, 2016: Rodney Locke [95] Kay Moss-Freese, woman in wheelchair: Moss-Freese killed: Locke quit APD February 2016: Locke arrested: October 22, 2016: Michael David Pacheco, Walgreens Coors/Central [96] arrested: shots fired at ...
At 6 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 4, the hosts of the library’s “Read, Return, Repeat” podcast, will join “Books & Whatnot” hosts Beth Golay and me for a conversation about the new categories and ...
The Old Main Library is a historic building in the Huning Highlands neighborhood of Albuquerque, New Mexico, originally built in 1925 as the main facility of the Albuquerque Public Library. Since the opening of the current Main Library in 1975, it has served as the library system's Special Collections branch, housing historical and genealogical ...
It is the largest public transportation system in the state, [3] serving 6,907,500 passengers in 2023, or about 24,600 per weekday as of the third quarter of 2024. The name "ABQ RIDE" and a new logo depicting the Alvarado Transportation Center clock tower were chosen in a contest, replacing the previous name SunTran in September 2004.