(0.6 km from Flagstaff Community Labyrinth)
Located 600 metres from Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff AZ Home with Proximity to Golf Downtown and NAU! offers accommodation with a kitchen. The property is 2.7 km from The North Pole Experience and 1.
1008 East Route 66 (1.0 km from Flagstaff Community Labyrinth)
Set in Flagstaff, 1.6 km from Northern Arizona University, Hotel Aspen boasts a seasonal outdoor pool and mountain and desert canyon views. Each room at this hotel is air conditioned and comes with a flat-screen TV.
1008 East Route 66 (1.0 km from Flagstaff Community Labyrinth)
Set in Flagstaff, Arizona, approximately 1 mile from Northern Arizona University Hotel Aspen features a seasonal outdoor pool and views of the surrounding mountains and desert canyons.
224 South Mikes Pike Street (1.2 km from Flagstaff Community Labyrinth)
Set in Flagstaff, Arizona, this hotel is 0.8 miles from Northern Arizona University.
300 S Milton Rd (1.2 km from Flagstaff Community Labyrinth)
This hotel, which features an indoor pool, is located ten minutes from Flagstaff Pulliam Airport. All rooms include complimentary Wi-Fi. Daily, a hot QUIKSTART breakfast is served.
122 West Route 66 (1.2 km from Flagstaff Community Labyrinth)
This hotel, located near Northern Arizona University and the city centre of Flagstaff, Arizona, offers convenient services and amenities, including complimentary wireless high-speed internet access in all guestrooms.
223 South Milton Road (1.3 km from Flagstaff Community Labyrinth)
This small motel is across the street from Northern Arizona University and minutes from Lowell Observatory. The motel offers free on-site parking and guest rooms with free internet access.
23 N. Leroux St. (1.3 km from Flagstaff Community Labyrinth)
Weatherford Hotel is located in Flagstaff 1.4 miles from Northern Arizona University. It features a restaurant, free private parking, and a bar. Located approximately 2.
Flagstaff Community Labyrinth is a unique and beautiful attraction located in Flagstaff, Arizona. It is an outdoor labyrinth designed in the style of a classical labyrinth with seven rings encircling a center. This design was inspired by the 11-Circle Chartres Cathedral Labyrinth in France, which dates back as early as 1201 A.D. The Flagstaff Community Labyrinth project was completed in 2005 and is owned and maintained by the Flagstaff Cultural Partners and sanctioned by the City of Flagstaff.
The Flagstaff Community Labyrinth has become a popular destination for locals and tourists alike to explore, meditate, relax or take part in various activities such as yoga classes or workshops with local experts. It has also become an important symbol of community spirit amongst the people of Flagstaff, symbolizing peace, unity and acceptance. With its calming atmosphere and natural beauty, it provides visitors with an opportunity to reconnect with themselves on a deeper level.
The labyrinth consists of sixteen pathways that are each twelve feet wide and constructed using stones from nearby mountainsides. Each stone has been hand placed to form intricate patterns around the circumference of each ring leading up to the heart at its center. As one progresses through the labyrinth their journey will be marked by five different stations along the way: traditional Celtic knots carved into stone benches, four-directional Tai Chi symbols carved into boulders, images from indigenous cultures depicting creation stories inscribed onto plaques, four stone pillars representing Nature's elements (earth, wind, fire & water) surrounded by native plants & flowers and finally a resting point with benches surrounding a fire pit - all celebrating our shared human experience here on Earth.
Over time, this enchanting location has become more than just an ordinary tourist spot; it also acts as an educational tool for those visiting to learn about other spiritual practices they might not have encountered before. It offers many opportunities for self-reflection within nature’s embrace while connecting people to their own inner wisdom as well as to their greater community - both past and present - through these ancient pathways that lead us home again.