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Oklahoma and Surrounding Counties Real Estate Company"
Providing a superior level of informed, professional real estate services to
home buyers and house sellers in the greater Tulsa
and Tulsa Oklahoma area.
Call Me Today Tom Anderson 1611 S. Utica Ave
PMB 307
Tulsa, OK 74104
(918) 299-1591 Office
(918) 814-1973 Cell Phone
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New home in Tulsa
Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?) is the
second-largest city in Oklahoma, following Oklahoma City, the
state capital. As of 2005, the estimate for the city
population was 382,457.[1] It is the county seat of Tulsa (looking
for new home in Tulsa?) County. Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?)’s
Metropolitan Statistical Area was estimated to have a 2005
population of 887,715 and Tulsa's (looking for new home in Tulsa?)
Combined Statistical Area, which includes the Bartlesville
Micropolitan Area, was estimated to have a 2005 population of
936,864. Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?) is the 45th
largest city in the United States and the 93rd largest city in
North America.
Uptown is the name given to a fairly small area immediately to
the south of Downtown. Referred to by residents as
"Tulsa's (looking for new home in Tulsa?) Neighborhood
with a River View" it is bounded by U.S. 51/75 to the
North, the Arkansas River to the west, 21st Street to the
south and South Cincinnati Avenue to the east. Located on a
bluff above the Arkansas River it primarily contains homes
built in the early 20th Century as well as mid and high rise
condominiums overlooking the river. The historic Council Oak
Park and larger Veterans Park are in the area, as well as the
Boston District, a tightly packed collection of high-quality
clubs and restaurants.
North Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?) is home to a
large percentage of Tulsa's (looking for new home in Tulsa?)
African-American community. The area's Booker T. Washington
High School, Tulsa's (looking for new home in Tulsa?)
African-American high school during the segregation era and
now a magnet school, was judged in 2005 to be the 58th best
high school in the United States by Newsweek Magazine. Also
included in this area is the Brady District, the Greenwood
Historical District and the adjacent campus of Oklahoma State
University-Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?), the
internationally famous Gilcrease Museum, the Tulsa (looking
for new home in Tulsa?) International Airport, the Tulsa (looking
for new home in Tulsa?) Zoo, the Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?)
Air and Space Museum, and the nation's third-largest municipal
park, Mohawk Park. Many of the city's manufacturing and
industrial areas are located in North Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?).
The city is located in Northeast Oklahoma, a part of the state
often referred to as "Green Country." It is
considered the cultural and arts center of Oklahoma, boasting
two world-renowned art museums, full-time professional opera
and ballet companies, and the third largest concentration of
art deco architecture in the country, behind New York City and
Miami, Florida. [citation needed] Many of Tulsa's (looking for
new home in Tulsa?) downtown skyscrapers and also entire
neighborhoods were constructed in the art deco style of
architecture.
Downtown is known for its art deco architecture and, as
expected, office buildings. At 667 ft, for example, the BOK
Tower is the tallest building in any of the 5 "Plains
States" (Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota and
South Dakota) and was designed in 1975 by Minoru Yamasaki
& Associates, the same architect who designed the World
Trade Center in New York. Downtown contains Tulsa (looking for
new home in Tulsa?) largest entertainment and convention
venues, including the Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?)
Performing Arts Center, another Yamasaki designed
building.
Revitalization along the Arkansas River and
landmark projects such as Downtown's BOK Center are parts of
an ongoing massive city-wide revitalization plan. Contributing
to the Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?) cityscape are
also its main suburbs of Bixby, Broken Arrow, Catoosa, Coweta,
Glenpool, Jenks, Kiefer, Owasso, Sand Springs, Sapulpa,
Skiatook and Sperry.
Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?), located in the
northeastern corner of Oklahoma, lies between the edge of the
Great Plains and the foot of the Ozark Mountains in a
generally forested region of rolling hills.
The city is split by the prominent Arkansas River. The
Arkansas River flows in a wide, sandy-bottomed channel. Its
flow in the Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?) area is
controlled by upstream flood-control reservoirs and the
river's flow may vary widely throughout the year. A low-water
dam maintains a full channel in the area adjacent to downtown
Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?).
Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?) is heavily wooded, with
abundant parks and water areas. Several prominent hills with
names such as "Shadow Mountain" and "Turkey
Mountain" create varied terrain mostly in the southern
portion of the city. The central and northern sections are
generally flat to gently undulating, although the Osage Hills
extension into the northwestern part of the city further
varies the landscape.
"Riverwalk Crossing" in the suburb of Jenks is the
first of many developments planned or under construction along
the Arkansas River in the Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?)
area.
At the main entrance to Oral Roberts
University stands the well-known praying hands sculpture. At
60 feet in height, it is the largest praying hands monument in
the world.
Primary universities in the city include the University of
Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?) (ranked among the top
100 universities in the nation by US News and World Report),
founded in 1882; and Oral Roberts University, founded by
evangelist Oral Roberts in 1963. Oklahoma State University has
a fully-functioning branch campus in Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?),
Oklahoma State University - Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?).
The OSU Center for Health Science and the highly regarded OSU
College of Osteopathic Medicine are also located in the city.
The University of Oklahoma also has a graduate campus in Tulsa
(looking for new home in Tulsa?), known as the Schusterman
Center, located in the Midtown neighborhood.
Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?) Community College (TCC)
is the largest community college in Oklahoma and operates 4
campuses spread across the city as well as a conference center
in Midtown. Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?) Technology
Center (TTC) operates as an independent school district
offering two-year vocational education programs. It is the
largest Vo-Tech system in Oklahoma, with 6 campuses in Tulsa (looking
for new home in Tulsa?) County.
Parks, gardens and nature preserves
The City of Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?) manages 140
parks covering roughly 6,000 acres (24 km²), featuring 2 golf
courses, 14 community centers, 21 swimming pools, 25 water
playgrounds, 60 picnic shelters, 115 playgrounds, 123 tennis
courts, 156 sports fields, The River SkatePark, fitness
facilities, gymnasiums, meeting rooms and facilities, trails
and more. One of the most popular parks is Woodward Park in
the midtown area. The 45-acre tract boasts a wide variety of
horticultural presentations, including 15,000 azalea plants,
rock gardens, an English herb garden, ponds and waterfalls, a
Victorian conservatory (Lord and Burnham), and the Linnaeus
Teaching Garden. The Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?)
Municpal Rose Garden, containing 6,000 rose plants of 250
varieties, and the Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?)
Garden Center are also located adjacent to Woodward Park.
The Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?) River Parks
Authority (TRPA) maintains a linear park along more than 10
miles of the banks of the Arkansas River. Over 20 miles of
hard-surfaced biking and running trails traverse the park. The
park also contains a rugby field, sand volleyball courts, disc
golf courses, playgrounds and a children's splash park, a
bistro and cafe, a pedestian bridge with fishing platforms
crossing the river, and a large collection of wildlife bronze
sculptures. There is also a large "festival park"
containing an amphitheatre and floating stage. It is the site
of several community events each year, including the popular
annual Oktoberfest.The TRPA also manages the "Turkey
Mountain Urban Wilderness Area" on a high hill along the
west bank of the Arkansas River. The area covers a heavily
wooded bluff and features rugged hiking and mountain biking
trails and scenic vistas overlooking south Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?).
Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?) County also owns and
manages 4 large multi-purpose parks in Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?)
(Chandler, Haikey Creek, LaFortune and O'Brien), the Westbank
Soccer Complex, 2 golf courses, 4 community centers, 21
lighted baseball and softball fields, 20 lighted tennis
courts, and numerous athletic fields, jogging trails, picnic
shelters and playgrounds. Chandler Park is a popular location
for rapelling and rock climbing.
The Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?) Zoo and Living
Museum was named in 2005 as "America's Favorite Zoo"
by Microsoft Game Studios in connection with a national
promotion of their "Zoo Tycoon 2" computer game. It
is located in the northeast part of the city in Mohawk Park,
the third largest municipal park in the United States. The new
Oklahoma Aquarium is the state’s only freestanding aquarium.
It contains over 200 exhibits arranged in 9 galleries, and
boasts a 500,000 gallon walk-through shark tank. It is located
on the west bank of the Arkansas River in the suburb of Jenks,
Oklahoma.
The City of Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?) also
manages the Mary K. Oxley Nature Center in Mohawk Park and the
Redbud Valley Nature Preserve 12 miles northeast of Tulsa (looking
for new home in Tulsa?). The Oxley Center contains an
interpretive building with hands-on displays, classrooms, a
nature library and raised wildlife viewing areas. A boardwalk
and several hiking trails extend acoss Blackbird Marsh and
into the surrounding woods bordering Coal Creek and Lake
Sherry. The Redbud Valley preserve is managed in cooperation
with the Nature Conservancy. The preserve contains unique
micro-climates with plants and animal found nowhere else in
northeastern Oklahoma, springs and limestone caves. Trails
there are rough and rocky.
Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?) has a temperate climate
of the continental variety. As is typical for the temperate
zone, Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?) climate varies
throughout the seasons and experiences occasional extremes.
Primarily during the spring and early summer months, the Tulsa
(looking for new home in Tulsa?) area is often subjected to
severe thunderstorms, some of which contain large hail,
damaging winds and, not infrequently, tornadoes. Severe
weather is not limited, though, to this season. On December
5th 1975, for example, Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?)
experienced a damaging tornado.
The spring and early summer thunderstorm pattern also provides
the area with a disproportionate share of its annual rainfall,
which averages around 100 cm (39 inches). Due to frequent
flooding in past decades, Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?)
now has one of the most extensive flood control systems in the
nation. In 2000, FEMA honored Tulsa (looking for new home in Tulsa?)
as leading the nation in flood plain management.
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