Rancho los Caballos New Mexico Land for Sale

Albuquerque, New Mexico Snapshot



Albuquerque, New Mexico Snapshot

Albuquerque is the largest city in the state of New Mexico, United States. It is the county seat of Bernalillo County and is situated in the central part of the state, straddling the Rio Grande. The city population was 448,607 as of the 2000 U.S. census. As of the 2007 census estimate, the city's population was 523,590, with a metropolitan population of 841,133 as of July 1, 2007. In 2007, Albuquerque ranked as the 32nd-largest city as well as the 2nd fastest growing city in the country. Albuquerque has the 59th-largest metropolitan area in the U.S. The Albuquerque MSA population includes the city of Rio Rancho, one of the fastest growing cities in the United States, a hub for many master-planned communities which are expected to draw future businesses and residents to the area. Albuquerque is home to the University of New Mexico and Kirtland Air Force Base as well as Sandia National Laboratories and Petroglyph National Monument. The Sandia Mountains run along the eastern side of Albuquerque and the Rio Grande flows through the city north to south.

The first travelers on Route 66 appeared in Albuquerque in 1926, and before long dozens of motels, restaurants, and gift shops had sprung up along the roadside to serve them. Route 66 originally ran through the city on a north-south alignment along Fourth Street, but in 1937 it was realigned along Central Avenue, a more direct east-west route. The intersection of Fourth and Central downtown was the principal crossroads of the city for decades. The majority of the surviving structures from the Route 66 era are on Central, though there are also some on Fourth. Signs between Bernalillo and Los Lunas along the old route now have brown, historical highway markers denoting it as Pre-1937 Route 66.

The establishment of Kirtland Air Force Base in 1939, Sandia Base in the early 1940s, and Sandia National Laboratories in 1949, would make Albuquerque a key player of the Atomic Age. Meanwhile, the city continued to expand outward onto the West Mesa.

Albuquerque's downtown entered the same phase and development as nearly every city across the United States. As Albuquerque spread outward, the downtown area fell into a decline. Many historic buildings were razed in the 1960s and 1970s to make way for new plazas, high-rises, and parking lots as part of the city's urban renewal phase. Only recently has downtown come to regain much of its urban character, mainly through the construction of many new loft apartment buildings and the renovation of historic structures like the KiMo Theater.


Make an Inquiry           Request a DVD          Plan a Tour

Rancho Los Caballos, an RLF Rancho Caballos LLC Development from Colorado Springs Colorado
Exclusive Brokerage by the Mountainair Land Company Mountainair, New Mexico 87036
            Telephone:  (505) 440-5626  Email: takemehome@ranchocaballos.com

Mountainair Development  Horse Property Real Estate  Future of New Mexico  New Mexico Home Site  Home Site Pricing Featured New Mexico Lot Sale  Mountainair Real Estate Map
Development Documents View New Mexico Slide Show  New Mexico Land Video  Mountainair NM  Albuquerque NM Ruidoso NM  Santa Fe NM  Belen NM  Hiking Mountainair  
Mountain Biking in Manzanos  Hunting Mountainair Cibola National Forest Manzano Mountain State Park  Salinas Pueblo Missions 

Site Management by: Go West Marketing LLC, Rudioso, New Mexico