You don’t need to a have a degree in architecture or art to appreciate the stature and beauty of architectural landmarks in Arizona. Although they don’t quite compare to our stunning landscape, these buildings still leave a lasting impression on their visitors.

  1. Arcosanti

Cody/Flickr

Jan Pauw/Flickr This place is about 70 miles north of Phoenix and is its own town. Built as an experimental town that would have little impact on the earth, many of the buildings feature a unique style.

  1. Arizona Biltmore Resort & Spa, Phoenix

Voenix Rising/Flickr

SD Dirk/Flickr This famous Phoenix location was designed by one of Frank Lloyd Wright’s former drafters, Albert Chase McArthur. At the time of the building’s design, Wright dismissed the resort but then later tried to claim credit as the primary designer.

  1. Arizona State Capitol, Phoenix

Gage Skidmore/Flickr Designed in the Classical Revival style, this building showed that Arizona was ready for statehood when it was built at the beginning of the twentieth century.

  1. Burton Barr Central Library, Phoenix

Visitor7/Wikimedia Commons The main library in the city, Burton Barr Central Library’s exterior was designed to resemble the Monument Valley mittens.

  1. Chapel of the Holy Cross, Sedona

Tony Fernandez/Flickr

Susan Smith/Flickr Like many of the examples on this list, this church looks beautiful on the outside and inside.

  1. Grady Gammage Memorial Auditorium, Tempe

Tempe Preservation/Flickr

Voenix Rising/Flickr One of Frank Lloyd Wright’s final commissioned pieces, this was actually originally designed to be an opera house in Baghdad.

  1. Luhrs Tower, Phoenix

Wikimedia Commons One of the first skyscrapers in Phoenix, this fine example of the Art Deco style was also the tallest building in the Southwest for decades. The building has escaped demolition and, thankfully, has been restored for future use.

  1. Mission San Xavier del Bac, Tucson

Paucal/Flickr

Daniel Ramirez/Flickr This is an excellent example of the Spanish colonial architectural style and is still an active church today.

  1. Orpheum Theatre, Phoenix

BEV Norton/Flickr This example of the Spanish Revival style was built in the late 1920s and went through several ownerships before undergoing a 12-year restoration by the city.

  1. Pima County Courthouse, Tucson

James Charnesky/Flickr

JR P/Flickr This blend of Mission Revival and Spanish Colonial Revival styles really show off some of the Moorish influences of Spanish architecture in the 1500s.

  1. Taliesin West, Scottsdale

Daniel Hooker/Flickr

Lance Belville/Flickr More evidence that Frank Lloyd Wright’s Prairie Style entered the Southwest, Taliesin West was Wright’s architectural ode to the desert.

  1. Tempe Municipal Building, Tempe

Visitor7/Wikimedia Commons When you first see this building, you probably think the construction workers were looking at the building plans upside down. In reality, the upside pyramid shape was designed to keep the building warm in the winter and cool in the summer.

  1. Viad Tower (formerly Dial Tower), Phoenix

Jimmy Beverage/Flickr This building was originally built for the Dial Corporation and was designed to look like a bar of Dial soap.

What other architectural landmarks do you recommend visiting in Arizona? Tell us in the comments below!

Cody/Flickr

Jan Pauw/Flickr

This place is about 70 miles north of Phoenix and is its own town. Built as an experimental town that would have little impact on the earth, many of the buildings feature a unique style.

Voenix Rising/Flickr

SD Dirk/Flickr

This famous Phoenix location was designed by one of Frank Lloyd Wright’s former drafters, Albert Chase McArthur. At the time of the building’s design, Wright dismissed the resort but then later tried to claim credit as the primary designer.

Gage Skidmore/Flickr

Designed in the Classical Revival style, this building showed that Arizona was ready for statehood when it was built at the beginning of the twentieth century.

Visitor7/Wikimedia Commons

The main library in the city, Burton Barr Central Library’s exterior was designed to resemble the Monument Valley mittens.

Tony Fernandez/Flickr

Susan Smith/Flickr

Like many of the examples on this list, this church looks beautiful on the outside and inside.

Tempe Preservation/Flickr

One of Frank Lloyd Wright’s final commissioned pieces, this was actually originally designed to be an opera house in Baghdad.

Wikimedia Commons

One of the first skyscrapers in Phoenix, this fine example of the Art Deco style was also the tallest building in the Southwest for decades. The building has escaped demolition and, thankfully, has been restored for future use.

Paucal/Flickr

Daniel Ramirez/Flickr

This is an excellent example of the Spanish colonial architectural style and is still an active church today.

BEV Norton/Flickr

This example of the Spanish Revival style was built in the late 1920s and went through several ownerships before undergoing a 12-year restoration by the city.

James Charnesky/Flickr

JR P/Flickr

This blend of Mission Revival and Spanish Colonial Revival styles really show off some of the Moorish influences of Spanish architecture in the 1500s.

Daniel Hooker/Flickr

Lance Belville/Flickr

More evidence that Frank Lloyd Wright’s Prairie Style entered the Southwest, Taliesin West was Wright’s architectural ode to the desert.

When you first see this building, you probably think the construction workers were looking at the building plans upside down. In reality, the upside pyramid shape was designed to keep the building warm in the winter and cool in the summer.

Jimmy Beverage/Flickr

This building was originally built for the Dial Corporation and was designed to look like a bar of Dial soap.

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