Beta Release: Incomplete/Experimental, see
notes
.
 
Weather
Census Data
County/Parish: Washington
Population/Size
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Pop. Estimate: 177,556 (2019)
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Pop. Last Census: 138,115 (2010)
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Pop. Growth: 24.3%
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Pop/Sq Mile: 56.9 (2010)
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Area: 2,426.36 (2010) Sq. Miles
Economics/Housing
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Median House Value: $262,200
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Owner Occupied: 69.7%
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Median Rental Cost: $1,000
Travel/Congestion
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Avg. Commute To Work Time: 17.5
City/Town: Washington
Population/Size
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Pop. Last Census: 18,761 (2010)
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Pop/Sq Mile: 571.0 (2010)
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Area: 32.86 (2010) Sq. Miles
Economics/Housing
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Median House Value: $279,900
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Owner Occupied: 69.1%
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Median Rental Cost: $1,117
Travel/Congestion
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Avg. Commute To Work Time: 17.1
 
Wikipedia Nearby
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Purgatory Correctional Facility
Purgatory Correctional Facility is the county jail of Washington County, Utah. Also known as the Washington County Jail, it is located near St. George, Utah at Purgatory Flats, hence its unusual name.Peter Lattman, , Wall Street Journal, September 14, 2007 Technically lying within the borders of (...)
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Elephant Arch
Elephant Arch is a small natural sandstone arch in the Red Cliffs National Conservation Area and Red Cliffs Desert Reserve north of Washington, Utah that resembles the trunk and eye of an elephant. The arch is part way up a hillside at the end of a dirt hiking trail. (...)
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KHKR
KHKR (1210 AM) is an American radio station simulcast with a format known as 97.7 FM ESPN. Licensed to Washington, Utah, United States, the station is owned by Cherry Creek Radio. KHKR has been granted an FCC construction permit to diplex at the KDXU site and decrease night power to 231 watts. (...)
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Diamond Ranch Academy
The Diamond Ranch Academy is a residential treatment center and therapeutic boarding school in Hurricane, Utah. It serves adolescents with various issues, including ADHD predominantly inattentive, using what they call the "Real Life Transition Program", which includes a peer participant judicial (...)
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Robert D. Covington House
The Robert D. Covington House was built in 1859 in Washington, Utah. Built for Mormon bishop Robert D. Covington, it was one of the first buildings in Washington and one of the largest in town, furnishing accommodation for visitors that included Brigham Young (...)