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About Albuquerque's Southwest Heights

New Listing, Southwest Heights, 10620 Walnut Canyon Rd SW

C. Lloyd McKenzie, MBA - ALLSTAR REALTY -- Your Home Sold in 59 Days or Less... : Real Estate Agent in Albuquerque, NM

New Listing, Southwest Heights,
10620 Walnut Canyon Rd SW
Albuquerque, NM 87192
3-4 bedrooms / 2 bath / 2 car Ga/ 1400 sq ft
$149,000
New Listing - Southwest Heights - 10620 Walnut Canyon Rd. SW, Albuquerque NM 87121
A Nice Spacious Home.Very Well Maintained Atreus
3-Bedroom home.Tall Vaulted Ceilings. Open Floor Plan.
Ceramic Tile In Kitchen. Nice Light Fixtures & Ceiling
Fans. Backyard Has Large Covered Patio and is Perfect For
Entertaining! Wonderful Owner's Suite, Boasts
Upgraded Tile In The Bathroom




Albuquerque NM Southwest Mesa in the News

Eloise Gift, Albuquerque New Mexico Real Estate: Real Estate Agent in Albuquerque, NM

Body Count 13, the headline of the Albuquerque Journal screams in bold three-fourths-inch type. And in smaller type, making us breath a sigh of relief, There’s no Serial Killer on the Loose, APD [Albuquerque Police Department] Chief Says. But the unearthing of so many bodies next to a gated community on the edge of the  southwestern expansion of the city  is a worrisome mystery that continues to unfold. Two of the bodies have been identified as young women in their twenties who disappeared 2004-2005. The cause of their death and why they were buried in that spot is  yet to be determined.  The search continues. No one knows if more bodies lie hidden there. Local and national television news photographs showed a site that looks like a huge archeological dig. I needed to see it for myself.

Just over a year a go, I helped a client move into a gated community adjacent to vacant lands that are now the subject of this search. I called up my former client and we agreed to visit the site together. The directions are: south on Coors to Dennis Chavez, to right on 118th Street across from the neighborhood school being built according to LEED specifications.  The gates  swing open for me as I turn right from 118th street into my former client’s community.  He is waiting for me. He climbs into the car and we return to 118th, turn right and in two minutes are at the excavation site. It is as I saw it on CNN--neat mounds of earth and trenches are spread over the fenced-off 100 acre area that a builder had started to prepare for residential construction.  Some of the dig is quite close to the street. A van parked on the site has “Crime Lab” prominently written on its side. We park near a police car on the street and get out of our car for a closer look and to take pictures.  The site is quiet.  Today is Sunday. My client says that on weekdays  diggers with shovels are all over the site.   A few other people are are parked nearby and are taking pictures also.

One of the photographers is from the Albuquerque Journal and we talk about how unlikely it seems to have a crime scene in such a beautiful spot.  The mesa stretches peaceful, serene and undisturbed as far as eye can see westward. Eastward and to the south, the Sandia and Manzano Mountains rise - today a blue-green backdrop for the city of Albuquerque.  As the city expands westward in the only direction in which undeveloped land remains available, we have arrived at this place that as recently as five years ago was peaceful, pristine, undisturbed land conceivably ideal for the perfect crime or a permanent resting place. As things stand, New Mexico,  geographically one of the largest states in the Union and in population one of the smallest, seems paradoxically blessed and cursed with an abundance of such spaces.

Almost one year ago, my client, a former real estate professional himself, relocated from another state and chose to buy a home in this newly developing area precisely for the beauty, the views and the nearby vast open spaces. Had it not been for the downturn in the community, building in this adjoining development would have continued without interruption and we would not have had to wait for for hikers to make the gruesome chance discovery. Findings, so far, indicate that disturbance at the site apart from that of the builder, date back four or five years, hence the APD’s determination that no serial killer is currently running loose.  For the time being, residents are breathing a sigh of relief. A feeling of security is restored, but the discovery is unfortunate and disquieting. Residents of Albuquerque and indeed all of New Mexico are unhappy and saddened by the discovery. They hope no more bodies will be found, and impatiently await the solving of the mystery.