Palace Avenue Office Suites Superb Natural Setting Walk to the Plaza - 3 Blocks & Canyon Road - 2 Blocks FOR SALE Professional Office Building CAMPUS STYLE SETTING An exceptional opportunity... 417 East Palace Avenue An Ideal Investor/User Property Professional Offices Santa Fe Commercial Real Estate 417 East Palace Avenue Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501 505-919-8819
PROFESSIONAL OFFICE BUILDING - INVESTOR/USER PROPERTY GREAT SETTING and OUTDOOR AREAS - SANTA FE ADOBE COMMUNITY OFFICES 417 EAST PALACE AVENUE SANTA FE, NM SALES PRICE: $3,500,000 Net Leasable Area: Gross Building Area: Land Area: Renovated: Building Class: Zoning: Parking: Walk-ability: Landscaping: 6,523 SF 7,702 SF 28,958 SF 2008 - to Commercial Code Classic Santa Fe Adobe/ Historical Designations BCD (Business Capitol District) with East Marcy/ East Palace Subdistrict; Excellent flexibility. Parking is off-street - 16 spaces on-site. Additional Street parking on Armijo and Delgado. Walk 2 Blocks to Canyon Road or 3-4 Blocks to the Santa Fe Plaza. The landscaping is very mature - Many large trees give a campus style feeling. Flowers, green lawn grass and ever greens provide for a very pleasant and appealing area for outdoor meetings.
CLASSIC SANTA FE ADOBE OFFICE SUITES - FIRST FLOOR Kitchen Printer Area
CLASSIC SANTA FE ADOBE OFFICE SUITES - VIEWS - 2nd FLOOR Palace Avenue Office Suites - Second Floor SUITE 11 SUITE 12
DRIVE UP PATIO SUITES - ULTIMATE CONVENIENCE Drive Up Patio Suites
A UNIQUE HISTORY in SANTA FE State of New Mexico Historical Designation 417 East Palace Avenue was originally built as a single -family residence in about 1910 by Adelina Otero Warren and Isabel Lancaster Eckles. During her career, Warren was leader of the suffrage movement in New Mexico, chairman of the New Mexico State Board of Health, the 1922 Republican nominee for U.S. Congress, superintendent of Santa Fe schools, and author of Old Spain in Our Southwest. Eckles served at various times as State Superintendent of Schools and superintendent of Santa Fe Schools. In the 1940 s, the residence was then transformed into the Catholic Maternity Institute. Many Santa Feans were born in the institute; others recall a day in their childhood spent on the front lawn enjoying a picnic and games. CMI was staffed by the Medical Mission Sisters, a Philadelphia-based order. Led by Sister M. Theophane Shoemaker, the institute for 30 years trained nurses, nuns and lay women to become nurse-midwives who provided prenatal, labor, delivery, and postnatal services to the poor and others who preferred a midwife instead of the hospital. In 1951 CMI opened a birthing facility in a new building in back. Known as La Casita, it may have been the first freestanding birthing center in the United States, and it was to become the model upon which many future such centers were patterned. Sister Theophane s efforts created the premier nurse-midwifery training center in the United States. She was part of a group of pioneering nurse-midwives in the early and mid-twentieth century who successfully changed maternity care in select regions of the United States and constantly fought relentless prejudice against and ignorance about their profession. Students graduated with a Master of Science degree from Catholic University of America and a Certificate in Nurse-midwifery from Catholic Maternity Institute, a first for nurse-midwifery. Today, American nurse-midwives attend a small but steadily growing percentage of births and it really began in Santa Fe, New Mexico and trained and serviced individuals locally, nationally and internationally.
CONVENIENCE WALK TO THE PLAZA - CANYON ROAD
THE ADDRESS 417 EAST PALACE AVENUE - PALACE AVENUE OFFICE SUITES