Tucson Regional Economic Opportunities, Inc.
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Quick Facts

General Facts About the Tucson Region:

• Tucson-area businesses can serve more than 34 million people within 500 miles and more than 55 million people within a 1,000 mile radius.

• Proximity to the I-10 (east/west) and I-19 (north/south) interstate highway system provides timely access to suppliers and markets in other southern states. Additionally, the area’s rail/truck intermodal (Port of Tucson) and international airport facilities provide supplementary, highly-efficient methods for people and product movement.

Southern Arizona is blessed with very few natural disasters. The stable climate is ideal for many types of business systems and testing environments.

• Since 1975, Metro Tucson has grown by an average of 2.4% per year. There have been only two instances within the reported time period where population growth fell below 1%. By 2019, the Tucson region will be home to nearly 1.24 million people.

Historically, employment growth in the Tucson region has outpaced the nation as a whole by a factor of between 1.6 and 1.8.

Greater Tucson is comparable to some of the most affordable markets west of the Mississippi.

Over half of Pima County's population is in the prime working age range of 18 to 54. Arizona itself is the 11th youngest state in the U.S. Almost 24.7% of the working age population speaks Spanish, making Tucson a center for bilingual opportunities.

In June 2009, Charter school Basis Tucson ranked No. 5 and University High School ranked No. 21 on Newsweek's list of the top 100 high schools in the country. In addition, Basis Tucson was lauded as a national model in education in the acclaimed documentary called “Two Million Minutes: The 21st Century Solution” in 2009.

Tucson is home to the world's largest gem, mineral and fossil show, the Accenture Match Play and the International Mariachi Festival.

As the 34th largest city in the U.S., Tucson offers all the amenities of a big city. The Wall Street Journal has characterized the Tucson region is a “mini-mecca” for the arts, as its one of only 14 U.S. cities to have professional opera, symphony, orchestra, ballet and theatre companies.

Within 100 kilometers of Tucson, there are more square centimeters of astronomical glass pointed out toward the universe -- including the recent $80 million Mount Graham International Observatory -- than at any other location on earth.



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