Lobo Solar
The Trusted, Transparent & Local Solar Partner
Lobo Solar
The Trusted, Transparent & Local Solar Partner
About Lobo Solar
Albuquerque and Lobo Solar
Why Lobo Solar?
Every step of the way, it entails a better standard of service and individualized solutions. It begins with recommending a system that satisfies your specific requirements. Lobo Solar designs your project using the best products on the market. We take care of all the permitting specifics, liaise with the utility provider, and guarantee complete client satisfaction at all times. It also implies that any queries or issues raised by our clients can be addressed directly with us. No call center exists. Our company was created for New Mexico homeowners to get the local based business with a premier service. We are committed to provide the best service to our clients through the whole process of transitioning to cleaner and sustainable energy for their homes. We guarantee every homeowner we assist in this transition is taken care of after the install as well. We look forward to being your solar company of the future.
Albuquerque
Albuquerque is a city in west-central New Mexico, U.S.A., and the county seat (1883). It is situated on the Rio Grande opposite a pass between the Sandia and Manzano mountains to the east. When Europeans first arrived in the region in 1540, there were Native American pueblos (villages) there. It was called after the duke of Alburquerque, who served as viceroy of New Spain at the time it was founded in 1706 by Don Francisco Cuervo y Valdés, governor and captain general of New Mexico (the first r was later dropped). It developed into a significant commerce hub along the Chihuahua Trail coming from Mexico.
Santa Fe, the state capital, which is located about 60 miles (100 km) to the northeast principal's cultural and political hub. However, Albuquerque is the largest city and the economic center of New Mexico, and it is connected to a vast network of highways, airplanes, and trains. The military and high-tech industries constitute the backbone of the city's economy. 181 square miles in size (469 square km). Albuquerque Metro Area (2010): 887,077; Pop. (2010): 545,852; Pop. (2020): 564,559; Albuquerque Metro Area (916,528).
Characteristics of the city, an adobe house
Albuquerque appears to have reached its physical limitations, preventing expansion into neighboring valleys, and is surrounded by mountains, the Rio Grande, lava cliffs, military installations, and Native American pueblos. Suburban housing projects make up a large portion of the metropolis. Older neighborhoods flank the broad Rio Grande's banks, with Spanish-style adobe homes tucked between rows of tall cottonwood and oak trees, albeit they are relics of a another time. Critics claim that due to centrifugal growth, which started in the middle of the 1940s when Albuquerque became a hub for Cold War-related military research and manufacturing, the city is losing its unique identity. The city continues to draw new people, who are drawn by the area's favorable temperature and a lower cost of living than much of the United States, despite an increase in crime and urban expansion. Longer-term residents fight to preserve the city's unique historic architecture and small-town way of life while newcomers move in.
Desert Mountains
Sandia Mountains Albuquerque is situated in a wide valley that runs roughly 30 miles (48 km) east to west in the Chihuahuan Desert. The majority of the valley's length is bordered by the Manzano Mountains, which are slightly lower than the Sandia Mountains, the low but rocky lava escarpments to the south, and the Sandia Mountains, which are to the north. A highway follows the Rio Grande's path through the city southward to the Texas border, cutting across the western part of the valley. A lava field and a collection of dormant volcanoes are located to the west of the Rio Grande. Tijeras Canyon, a rocky, boulder-strewn gorge that emerges into a wide plateau at the eastern end of the valley, is traversed by a multilane roadway. Because the entire area is a part of the Rio Grande Rift Valley, small earthquakes frequently occur there.
View of Venice, Italy's principal waterway, the Grand Canal (Canale Grande in Italian), with gondolas on the water and houses lining the banks.
The majority of the city's core is built on mountainous terraces made of Miocene and Pliocene-aged gravels (23 million to 5.3 million years ago and 5.3 million to 2.6 million years ago, respectively). These terraces were created over thousands of years by soil and rocks that were washed down from the Sandia and Manzano mountains in the area and deposited by recurrent floods. These nutrient-rich soils have supported the long history of floodplain agriculture in the area.
Climate There are often more than 200 clear days per year in Albuquerque, which has a warm and dry climate. The annual average temperature is around 13 °C (mid-50s F). A rain shadow is created when moisture-rich air flowing north from the Gulf of Mexico is largely blocked by the Manzano Mountains to the east. Because of this, the city only gets about 9 inches (230 mm) of rain per year, with the most of it falling in the summer. In the summer, the Sandia Mountains get about 30 inches (760 mm) of rain, while in the winter, they get about the same amount of snow.
Church of San Felipe de Neri
Plaza Vieja Plaza Vieja San Felipe de Neri Church Plaza Vieja
The 18th-century Old Town and the 19th-century Downtown have long been neglected by the government, despite efforts to draw attention to these historic districts with new public plazas, museums, and parks. Suburbs and satellite villages have risen quickly in contrast. But around the beginning of the twenty-first century, Downtown started to draw people once more, particularly teachers from the University of New Mexico as well as students and artists. Albuquerque lacks a central downtown core in favor of a number of widely dispersed centers, like many other western American cities.
To the north of Old Town, in the Uptown neighborhood, are hotels, office parks, and industrial parks in addition to shopping malls. Government structures, medical facilities, and museums can be found in the Downtown region to the south of Old Town. The University of New Mexico and a number of lovely, tree-lined neighborhoods can be found east of Old Town. Far Heights, which stretches from Uptown to the Sandia Mountain foothills, is primarily a sprawl of suburban residences, large shopping outlets, and dining establishments. The North Valley and the South Valley, which are located to the north and south of the city center and consist of a number of historic farming communities, are both predominantly Hispanic and have an industrial or agricultural feel. Rio Rancho, a separate entity that was once a retirement community but is now a small, upmarket metropolis, is located far northwest of Old Town.
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