
And with five sommeliers on staff, the Hacienda is noted for its extensive wine cellar, one of the finest in Arizona, housing in excess of 700 labels, and amounting to more than 6,000 bottles of wine. The kitchen staff presents guests with delights from the garden and from the mature fruit trees on the property, including a rare variegated lemon tree. The Hacienda’s Grill, established in 1997, firmly put the resort in a category of fine dining establishments, as noted by various publications, among them Wine Enthusiast Magazine, which honored it with an Award of Ultimate Distinction. These artists’ works - many outdoors - delight guests as they explore the botanical offerings of the High Sonoran Desert, which includes a vegetable garden on the property. Santa Fe artist Carlos Carulo’s works, both paintings and sculptures, are part of the Hacienda’s collection as are works by Steven Derks, Rigsby Frederick and Ted Silverman. Timan’s son, Zak, also adds to the ambiance of the dining room with his hanging glass pieces. Its gardens and lush desert grounds are filled with sculptures, including those by Jeff Timan, a partner of the Hacienda, whose welded steel sculptures feel as if they are an organic part of the landscape. Well more than $1 million of art graces the Hacienda, both inside and out. The accoutrements of Spanish Colonialism are present in the Talavera tile sinks in each suite, in the beams of the ceilings and the trim of the walls. The furnishings are artlike, handcrafted of alder with hand-forged hardware. Ten-foot ceilings make each room feel capacious with stunning mountain and city views.

The new Catalina rooms, arranged as if they are a village, are spacious at 550 square feet each. In 2015, the addition of 30 rooms, constructed in the spirit of the original hotel, expanded its capacity to 59 rooms. In 1995, the Hacienda was purchased by a group of local investors who carefully renovated the property, transforming it into the luxury boutique resort that’s earned kudos from locals and visitors alike. At 2,000 square feet, it is still one of the most popular suites at the resort today. Legend has it that Hacienda’s Casita Grande was the favorite hideaway of Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn. In 1944, the Hacienda was converted into a guest ranch that immediately attracted the silver screen’s most notable stars, among them John Wayne and Clark Gable. Original adobe and brick remains preserved in a historic section of the resort. These tiles, known as “Mexican tiles,” decorate stairways and delight guests when they unexpectedly appear on sidewalks. Joesler designed the Hacienda as a Spanish Colonial Revival with curved archways and doors, hand-forged, wrought-iron elements and original hand-painted tiles that grace stuccoed walls. His experiences in these countries help explain his knowledge of the Moorish nod in Spanish Colonial style. after he spent years designing structures abroad, including those in North Africa, Spain, Cuba and Mexico. (He ultimately designed 400 buildings in Tucson under the Murpheys’ patronage.) The architect was from Switzerland and came to the U.S. After a fire in the 1930s, the Murpheys hired architect Josias Joesler, an early practitioner of the Spanish Colonial Revival style, to rebuild and redesign sections of the ranch. “Each place has been inducted into this distinguished program based upon historic significance and its record of preserving authenticity, sense of place and architectural integrity,” says Lawrence Horwitz, executive director of the organization.Īnd the resort has earned the designation, especially in its rich architectural history. It was appointed into the Historic Hotels of America under the auspices of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, joining 275 other landmark hotels such as the Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island in Michigan and the Gettysburg Hotel in Pennsylvania.

Now, the “Hacienda,” as locals refer to it, is a destination resort in the shadows of the Santa Catalina Mountains in Tucson, Arizona. The school attracted students from families with familiar names - Pillsbury, Westinghouse, Vanderbilt and Kellogg, to name a few. Hacienda del Sol, translated from Spanish to “Ranch of the Sun,” was originally a girls’ boarding school built by John and Helen Murphey in 1929. Today, chances are one will still be greeted with a warm welcome, but visitors are less likely to be assigned a horse… unless, of course, they decide to spend their time riding the trails on the 35-acre property. It’s likely she was handed a cowgirl hat to protect her from the hot Arizona sun and, shortly thereafter, assigned a horse. “Welcome to Hacienda del Sol, miss,” might have been the greeting a young lady from the East Coast heard after her long journey West in 1929.
