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Sante Opera

Doug Merriam/Santa Fe, New Mexico Convention and Visitors Bureau

  • Where to Live Next

Santa Fe, New Mexico

  • Smithsonian.com, April 01, 2008

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    Where to Live Next

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    Check out the 15 cities and towns in our guide to cultured retirement—then tell us what you think

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    Population: 72,056 (2006 estimate)
    Percentage of retirees: 16.4% in 2006
    Cost of living index: Above average
    Public libraries: 17 within 15 miles
    Public transportation: Santa Fe Trails Transit System buses cost $.50 per trip for those 60 and older, or $1.00 for a day pass.
    Access to airports: Santa Fe Airport is accessible only by select airlines from a connection in Phoenix, Denver or Albuquerque. Shuttle buses can be arranged to/from airport. Albuquerque International Airport is about 1 hour away. Express shuttle buses are available.
    Tax breaks: In New Mexico, taxpayers 65 and older may exempt up to $8,000 (single), $16,000 (joint) from any income source if their income is under $28,500 (individual filers) or $51,000 (married filing jointly).
    Number of museums: 29
    Number of cinemas: 8
    Cultural Highlights: Rich in museums, galleries, and performing arts.
    Access to Healthcare: Good, with the regional medical center for northern New Mexico; the New Mexico Cancer Institute, and geriatric care centers.
    Climate: Pleasant year-round, with sunny days, low humidity and mild temperatures; all four seasons represented.
    Annual precipitation: 14.22 inches
    Nearby Attractions: Sangre de Cristo Range, ski areas, Indian pueblos, old mission towns, Georgia O'Keeffe's Abiquiu home all within a couple of hours' drive, Taos about 1.5 hours away.
    Useful links: The Official Website of Santa Fe, New Mexico
    In the Know: "In deciding on a location to retire to, we always knew we'd go west. But we wanted to find a place that had a lot of amenities that we like: classical music, chamber music festival, the opera, wonderful art, wide open spaces and 300 days more or less of sunshine every year. It's a relatively small city, but for a town of its size there is just a huge amount going on in the way of culture and the arts."
    -John Webber, volunteer at the Santa Fe Opera

    This small but sophisticated jewel of a town has superb arts, good restaurants and an ethnic mix without the frantic pace or anonymity of big-city life. It also embodies the best of the Southwest, proudly proclaiming its tri-cultural blend of Hispanic, Native American and Anglo traditions, its stunning natural setting, and its proximity to limitless outdoor options, from hiking to skiing to mountain biking.

    Situated at 7,000 feet in the high desert of New Mexico, this has been a coveted spot for 400 years, since the Spanish first established Santa Fe as a capital city. The residue of Spanish colonialism is evident today in the design of the central plaza, which functions as the social and cultural heart of the city, while the adobe pueblo-revival architecture that characterizes many of the structures speaks to the even older, Native American traditions of the area.

    It's possible to walk from one end of this concentrated town to the other in 30 to 40 minutes, passing along the way four designated historic districts/neighborhoods and a largesse of first-rate museums—the Museum of Fine Arts, the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum and the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, to name only a few. The city's galleries are concentrated in one of the historic districts, the Canyon Road area, which draws worldwide dealers and clientele, particularly during the annual Art Sante Fe festival. Another annual draw, the Sante Fe Opera, holds performances throughout the summer in a memorable open-air theater. There's also a chamber music festival, and the city has its own symphony.

    Only seven miles from downtown, the 1.5-million acre Sante Fe National Forest preserves high mesas and the alpine wilderness of the Sangre de Cristo Range.

    Population: 72,056 (2006 estimate)
    Percentage of retirees: 16.4% in 2006
    Cost of living index: Above average
    Public libraries: 17 within 15 miles
    Public transportation: Santa Fe Trails Transit System buses cost $.50 per trip for those 60 and older, or $1.00 for a day pass.
    Access to airports: Santa Fe Airport is accessible only by select airlines from a connection in Phoenix, Denver or Albuquerque. Shuttle buses can be arranged to/from airport. Albuquerque International Airport is about 1 hour away. Express shuttle buses are available.
    Tax breaks: In New Mexico, taxpayers 65 and older may exempt up to $8,000 (single), $16,000 (joint) from any income source if their income is under $28,500 (individual filers) or $51,000 (married filing jointly).
    Number of museums: 29
    Number of cinemas: 8
    Cultural Highlights: Rich in museums, galleries, and performing arts.
    Access to Healthcare: Good, with the regional medical center for northern New Mexico; the New Mexico Cancer Institute, and geriatric care centers.
    Climate: Pleasant year-round, with sunny days, low humidity and mild temperatures; all four seasons represented.
    Annual precipitation: 14.22 inches
    Nearby Attractions: Sangre de Cristo Range, ski areas, Indian pueblos, old mission towns, Georgia O'Keeffe's Abiquiu home all within a couple of hours' drive, Taos about 1.5 hours away.
    Useful links: The Official Website of Santa Fe, New Mexico
    In the Know: "In deciding on a location to retire to, we always knew we'd go west. But we wanted to find a place that had a lot of amenities that we like: classical music, chamber music festival, the opera, wonderful art, wide open spaces and 300 days more or less of sunshine every year. It's a relatively small city, but for a town of its size there is just a huge amount going on in the way of culture and the arts."
    -John Webber, volunteer at the Santa Fe Opera

    This small but sophisticated jewel of a town has superb arts, good restaurants and an ethnic mix without the frantic pace or anonymity of big-city life. It also embodies the best of the Southwest, proudly proclaiming its tri-cultural blend of Hispanic, Native American and Anglo traditions, its stunning natural setting, and its proximity to limitless outdoor options, from hiking to skiing to mountain biking.

    Situated at 7,000 feet in the high desert of New Mexico, this has been a coveted spot for 400 years, since the Spanish first established Santa Fe as a capital city. The residue of Spanish colonialism is evident today in the design of the central plaza, which functions as the social and cultural heart of the city, while the adobe pueblo-revival architecture that characterizes many of the structures speaks to the even older, Native American traditions of the area.

    It's possible to walk from one end of this concentrated town to the other in 30 to 40 minutes, passing along the way four designated historic districts/neighborhoods and a largesse of first-rate museums—the Museum of Fine Arts, the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum and the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, to name only a few. The city's galleries are concentrated in one of the historic districts, the Canyon Road area, which draws worldwide dealers and clientele, particularly during the annual Art Sante Fe festival. Another annual draw, the Sante Fe Opera, holds performances throughout the summer in a memorable open-air theater. There's also a chamber music festival, and the city has its own symphony.

    Only seven miles from downtown, the 1.5-million acre Sante Fe National Forest preserves high mesas and the alpine wilderness of the Sangre de Cristo Range.


     
    Comments

    Ha, Ha, very funny. The only people that can afford to live in Santa Fe are movie stars,highly penionsioned politcos with lucrative book deals, highly paid consultants that telecommute and fly their private jets to their jobs in California. Oh, also those Santa Fe natives who have had their homes since the Pueblo Revolt (1680) and now have to fight off the above named people from buying their property so they can demolish the home and build a mansion or "remodel" a quaint adobe abode in to an adobe mansion. Oh yeah, and don't forget the wage earners that live in substandard trailers.... Yeah, there is lots of culture but the last time I saw a local or native Santa Fean at the Santa Fe Opera, they were tending bar.

    Posted by Barbara on April 9,2008 | 03:03PM

    That sounds a lot like Key West, but at least there, you have land and mountains to escape the tourists and rich folk. Here we live and die on tourism. Not to mention that there really isn't much more to do than drink or fish, and I am allergic to seafood. Drinking gets old after a couple of years. Want to leave, Florida is HUGE, and it takes more than a weekend to really get out of here. The tourists always comment on how nice it must be to live here, but all I can think is I hope they're not too cheap on the tips so I can pay my $900 for a bedroom in the house I live in.

    Posted by Nick on May 10,2008 | 09:54AM

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