A midtown Tucson office building, designed by a famed local architect, has been bought by California investors.
The Sun Building at 2030 E. Speedway, just east of Campbell Avenue, sold for $1.9 million.
Alain Hartmann, with Hartmann Commercial, represented the seller, HFG Properties, and the buyer, Thorinson LLC, was self represented.
Built in 1960, the Sun Building is 100% occupied.
With Vice President Al Gore presiding in his capacity as president of the Senate, Congress formally certified George W. Bush the winner of the bitterly contested 2000 presidential election, and more events that happened on this day in history.
Designed by Anne Rysdale, the building features rock and stone facades, an atrium and waterfall that feeds into a koi pond.
Rysdale, a Tucson High School and University of Arizona alum, was the only registered female architect practicing in Arizona in the early part of her career that began in 1949, according to the Tucson Historic Preservation Foundation. Annie Graham Rockfellow, Arizona’s first female registered architect, had retired in 1938.
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Other commercial properties Rysdale designed in Tucson include The Tucson Inn, Old Spanish Trail Motel and the Shelter Cocktail Lounge.
The new owners aren’t planning any changes to the Sun Building.
Other recent commercial transactions include:
Process Control & Engineering LLC leased 3,000 square feet in the Romero-Prince Business Park, 3538 N. Romero Road, from Costa Verde Investments LLC. Ron Zimmerman, with Picor, represented the landlord. Susan Devall leased 2,530 square feet of industrial space in Euclid Industrial Park, 1019 S. Euclid Ave., from Rich Rodgers South Inc. Max Fisher, with Picor, handled the transaction. Community Provider of Enrichment Services Inc. leased 2,243 square feet in Acacia Square, 80 W. Fort Lowell Road, from R Legacy Irrevocable Trust. Max Fisher, with Picor, handled the transaction. Rooter Ranger LLC leased 1,725 square feet in Friebus Industrial Park, 2341 S. Friebus Ave., from Friebus Investor LLC. Picor’s Max Fisher represented the landlord and Landon Farnsworth, with JK Realty LLC, represented the tenant. Wow Real Estate LLC leased 1,598 square feet at 5151 E. Broadway from KCI-Broadway LLC, Scott Seldin-Broadway LLC, Belmont-Broadway LLC, and Tucson 5151 Investments LLC. Richard M. Kleiner and Thomas J. Nieman, with Picor, represented the landlord and Carlos Albelais, with Realty Executives Arizona Territory, represented the tenant. Z Beauty Salon & Barber Shop LLC leased 1,055 square feet in Plaza Centro, 345 E. Congress St., from CH Retail Fund I/Tucson Grant Road LLC. Greg Furrier, with Picor, represented the landlord. Gallery: A look into these Barrio Viejo homes:
Photos: Take a virtual tour of these Barrio Viejo homes in Tucson
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Welcome to the Barrio Viejo virtual home tour, benefitting the neighborhood’s Lalo Guerrero elder apartments. More about that later, but let’s get started with the tour, which features homes built from the 1880s right up until last year.
Jason Marrano
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 11, 2020
This recently restored 1911 adobe on South Meyer Avenue was the childhood home of Eduardo “Lalo” Guerrero, the father of Chicano music. He lived most of his adult life in Los Angeles, but a barrio complex of apartments for seniors was named in his honor in 2003. This Barrio Viejo virtual home tour benefits the neighborhood’s Lalo Guerrero elder apartments. Find the fundraiser here .
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Owners Amanda and Luke Kippert replaced the home’s roof and electrical system, installed air conditioning and made other major improvements in an Art Deco style. Danny Quihuis of Quihuis Architecture Co. helped with the project.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Guerrero, in the two photos on the left, was born Christmas Eve 1916. He learned to play the guitar when he was nine and by 17 wrote and performed what would become one of his most famous songs, “Canción Mexicana.” The 1936 musician comedy “The Gay Desperado” was filmed on South Meyer Avenue in a part of the barrio later torn down for construction of the Convention Center.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Pops of gold throughout the house give it glamour.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Notice the fancy gold feet on the old bathtub?
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
The pièce de résistance of the Lalo house is the patio mural by Sal Sawaki of Wagon Burner Arts.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
“Hot Pink Neighbor” by Ron Kenyon. He is a member of the Tucson Barrio Painters, a group of “plein air” painters who have long appreciated the architecture of the city’s barrios. Three years ago, as they noticed accelerating changes, they decided to make a more organized effort to capture the barrios on canvas.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
This house, built in the 1880s, had become a near-ruin by the time it was restored over three years in the early 1980s. Walls had to be rebuilt, and the original dirt, clay and manure roof removed. The cabinets were salvaged from the long-gone Damsky Cigars shop on East Congress Street.
James C. Larsen
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Many old barrio homes are built on the lot lines, leaving no front or side yards. But shady back patios are common.
James C. Larsen
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Notice the thickness of the adobes that case the windows. The ceilings are saguaro ribs.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
“Four doors” by Denyse Fenelon. “Barrio communities should be nurtured and appreciated for the architecture, lives and stories that have happened here. It’s hard to save what you can’t see so we’re attempting to preserve, in our way, the story of Tucson,” writes Fenelon, organizer of the Tucson Barrio Painters.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Several dozen homes have been built in the barrio in the past 15 years, either on lots where houses had been demolished years before or on land that had always been vacant. This house was built in 2017 by a couple that already had family connections to the barrio.
Soli Leal
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
The living room and kitchen are part of an open-concept area designed for family gatherings.
Soli Leal
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
The kitchen takes advantage of the home’s high ceilings. That’s another nod to the design of many of the barrio’s oldest buildings.
Soli Leal
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Luis H. Ibarra of Saavy Inc. was the general contractor.
Soli Leal
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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A Tucson-made patio bench gives the home a sense of place. “Be Kind” is the motto of the beloved Ben’s Bells project.
Soli Leal
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
From the street, the home hews to a traditional Sonoran style. It is built on the lot lines and has a flat roof. But the patio shows that is a modern structure.
Soli Leal
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Barbara Mulleneaux recently painted this long-vacant building at West Kennedy Street and South Meyer Avenue.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
This pre-1888 front room opens to the kitchen and dining area, then a laundry with an adjacent bathroom, and finally the rear bedroom and a doorway to the central courtyard. Years ago this type of design was referred to as a shotgun because the rooms line up like the long barrel of a shotgun. Brick floors have replaced the original wood floors, but the variegated light & dark gypsum interior plaster is a longtime Old Pueblo tradition.
Dave Olsen
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
This chandelier highlights the rough-sawn fir joists and old-growth planks a full 2 inches thick. Ceilings nearly 12 feet high kept hot air high in the summers when many Tucsonans slept outdoors on canvas cots or improvised hammocks.
Dave Olsen
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Till the 1990s this adobe room had two feet of dirt above its fir joists and packing crate planks. That was its original roof. One of the planks still visible today is addressed to "Geo. Martin", Arizona's second druggist.
Dave Olsen
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
A clean, sleek bedroom for this old house.
Dave Olsen
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Large skylights with white domes provide soft, diffused light for this kitchen, which has no windows. The room originally opened to a long porch 7 feet in depth, but early 20th century additions closed off even that bit of light, so skylights were an adaptation.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
This iron fence recycles old gas and water pipe salvaged from a large complex of former apartments restored from 1998-2000. Some of the adobe walls had collapsed, and the property was condemned. Designer-builder David Carter's material costs for the fence totaled just under $19 for the caps on the posts. Welder Jim Fredd was the fabricator.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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José Trujillo built this market in the western part of the barrio in the 1920s. It eventually became apartments -- including home to motorcycle riding tenants who changed oil in the living room -- an addiction-counseling center, a bed-and-breakfast and a home. This painting is by Dina Jasensky.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Joyce Nelson painted “Las 4 Esquinas,” one of the most iconic buildings in the barrio. Grocers or general shops were at three of the four corners at West Simpson Street and South Convent Avenue as far back as 1888. It isn’t clear when the building was first called Las 4 Esquinas, but it carried that name by 1917 at the latest. It was operated by Don Wah and his wife, Fok Yut Ngan, both Chinese immigrants.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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This 900-square-foot adobe was built before 1920. This is how it looked until about two years ago.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
The new owners who restored the house say they were inspired by homes in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Many interior items, such as lights and this sofa, were second-hand finds.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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A kitchen right out of Mexico.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
The homeowners’ next project is to build a new sister structure on the same property. Follow their work on Instagram at weboughtanadobe.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 16, 2020
Russell Recchion painted this building at Convent and Simpson.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
The vigas (wood beams) in this house were salvaged from trees burned in the 2002 Mount Lemmon fire. The home was built 10 years ago. The painting shows Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla, the father of Mexican independence. It was salvaged nearly 40 years ago from the Los Reales landfill.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Niches are common elements in older Mexican homes.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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The homeowners were walking in Guadalajara, Mexico, when they spotted workers installing a new roll-up garage door. The old iron gates were piled next to the street as trash. Shipped to Nogales by rail, they are now part of the back patio.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
This brick barrel vault was erected in three weeks without any formwork or other support. Every brick was set in place over thin air. Not till each row received its last brick was that row an arch -- a substantial structure.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Norm Sherwood painted the long-unused Teatro Carmen at 348 S. Meyer. It was built in 1915 by Carmen Soto Vásquez and was an elegant theater seating up to 1,400. Performers came from as far as Mexico City to appear in plays and operas. By about 1920 it became a movie theater and also hosted dances and boxing matches. It later became a garage and then the Black Elks Lodge.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
This home was designed by Sonya Sotinsky of FORS architecture + interiors as envisioned by its owners and built in 2015 on a vacant lot by Jamie Olding of Building Excellence, LLC.
Jason Marrano
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Mike Runde of The Runde Company built the Rumford fireplace, which is tall and shallow to reflect more heat. Homeowner Joe Patterson started the painting on the right, of John Street in Hartford, Conn., in about 1987. It was not quite finished, but his spouse, Kathleen McNaboe, framed it anyway. After they moved to the barrio, Joe removed the frame and completed his piece.
Jason Marrano
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Mike Tanzillo of Tanzillo and Son built cabinets and millwork work the house, which has a modern interior with steel counters and polished concrete floors.
Jason Marrano
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
The kitchen is part of the light-filled great room.
Jason Marrano
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
The office looks into a courtyard with a variety of fruiting trees.
Jason Marrano
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
High ceilings help make the bedroom spacious
Jason Marrano
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
This bathroom is tucked behind the bedroom.
Jason Marrano
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
David Rojo of Rojo Construction LLC built the home’s metal planter boxes. The outdoor tile art is by Carly Quinn of Carly Quinn Designs.
Jason Marrano
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
The home’s exterior celebrates the rich history of the barrio with hard troweled hand plaster and wood gates and shutters.
Jason Marrano
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
“Two Minutes to 5 Points,” by Terri Gay refers to the five-way intersection of 18th Street and Stone and Sixth avenues.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Back in 2014, the Star’s Tom Beal chose saguaro ribs as one of 100 objects that define Tucson. Here’s how he explained it: “Saguaro ribs were functional in early Tucson, where wood and metal were hard to come by before the railroad arrived in 1880. The ribs of the saguaro cactus, with an insulating layer of grass and native dirt piled atop them, served to fill in the spaces between roof beams hauled from nearby mountains. In Spanish, the beams are called “vigas” and the lateral pieces “latillas.” The ceilings of sleeping rooms were often covered with a sheet of muslin to keep the dirt from falling into your mouth as you snored away at night. You’ve no doubt seen the durable ribs on dead saguaros after the flesh falls away.” Ribs are still found in many of the barrio’s oldest homes.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Integral color was mixed with gypsum and perlite to create this variegated plaster.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Barrio painter Peter Farrow’s take on Las 4 Esquinas.
Picasa
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
This is one of four homes developed by Warren Michaels on the site of what had been a bakery. Rob Paulus was the architect and Dave Taggett the builder. The walls are Mikey Block, a lightweight but strong material with high thermal value.
Jason Marrano
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
The “Tucson” letters are from the old Greyhound bus station. The homeowners, Laura Walton and Dave Hamra, found them at Gather, A Vintage Market.
Jason Marrano
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
La Fortuna, the original bakery on this South Meyer Avenue site, was started by the Figueroa family in the 1920s.
Jason Marrano
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Artist Poe Dismuke of SamPoe Gallery in Bisbee created the high-flying cicada.
Jason Marrano
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
The patio is designed after traditional barrio gardens with pomegranate and figs trees, and a ramada of mesquite and ocotillo supporting gravevines. It also includes a modern water-harvesting system.
Jason Marrano
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Johanna Martinez honors the property’s history with the La Fortuna mural.
Jason Marrano
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
“Simply Green” by Barbara Mulleneaux. The home is on South Meyer Avenue.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
This is one of nine condos in a complex built in the 1880s as a livery and bunkhouse for the Palace Hotel, which was seven blocks north in the heart of downtown. In those days, when visitors came to town on horses, it wouldn’t do to keep animals right next to a nice hotel.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
The complex’s fireplaces weren’t built to today’s code standards, so they are decorative rather than functional.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Designer Linda Robinson, winner of the Master of the Southwest award from Phoenix Home & Garden, advised the homeowner on the interiors.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Many of the furnishings and lights are from Adobe House Antiques and Arte de la Vida. The home’s custom window hardware is by Perry Luxe.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Picture-rail moulding along the walls means there’s no need to drill into the plastered adobe to hang art.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Terri Gay painted this vacant house at West Cushing Street and El Paso. Most members of the Tucson Barrio Painters have social media accounts or web sites. Search individual names for more information about their art.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
The Lalo Guerrero apartments at West 18th Street and South Convent Avenue are on the site of the original Samuel Drachman Elementary School. It was built in 1901 as a four-room school but expanded over the years. Fire destroyed 80 percent of it in 1948. It was rebuilt but had fallen into disrepair by 1997 when a new school was constructed three blocks south.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
All but the central facade of the school was demolished just before its 100th anniversary. Federal and state grants and loans paid for construction of the 62 apartments now on the site. Pio Decimo and Barrio Viejo Elderly Housing Inc, non-profit corporations, operate the apartments on behalf of their residents.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Eduardo “Lalo” Guerrero attended Drachman in the 1920s and also the dedication of the apartments in 2003. World famous as a singer, songwriter and guitarist, he died in 2005.
Barrio Viejo virtual home tour
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Oct 7, 2020
Information for Tucson Real Estate is compiled from records at the Pima County Recorder’s Office and from brokers. Send information to Gabriela Rico, grico@tucson.com .