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Downtown Phoenix



Address

1001 N. 3rd Ave.
Ste 4
Phoenix, AZ 85003

Hours

7 Days a Week
11am - 9pm
Happy Hour Daily
Mon-Fri: 3pm - 6pm
Weekend all-day



 


Phone

602-258-7482

Holiday Hours

Thanksgiving Eve

regular hours

Thanksgiving Day

closed

December 24th

closing at 3pm

December 25th

closed

(resume regular hours 12/26)

New Year's Eve

regular hours

New Year's Day

open at 11am


Pita Jungle is making history in downtown Phoenix, inside the lovingly restored Gold Spot Marketing Center. One of the Valley's first shopping centers, the Gold Spot was originally built in 1925 and is currently on the National Register of Historic Places. The Spanish Colonial and Mission Revival architecture recall the best of a bygone era, and the relaxing, outdoor patio bar gives the place a nice neighborhood feel.

FEATURED ART

Josefa Ortiz (Left) & Jason Savaglio (Right)

Josefa Ortiz

Born and raised in Sonora Mexico Josefa migrated to the U.S at an early age to start a new life with her family. She experienced others doing art around her from all over and got inspired to start her own craft right before her second marriage. She slowly started to learn new forms and techniques. Spirituality and the natural world was a big factor in her finding out how she wants her foot to be set in the Art world. Josefa has been doing art for over 10+ years now and you’ll just have to ask her more about how she came to this point if you are interested. Thank you.

Jason Savaglio

Jason Savaglio is an artist and art educator. He is the former Principal of The New School For the Arts & Academics in Tempe and he still teaches there as a guest artist on occasion as well as running open studios in Painting and Life Drawing downtown. Jason has shown his work at several Pita Jungle locations over the past 14 years and he has also exhibited his work at MARS, Holga’s, ArtLink headquarters & several other Art Detour venues over the past 16 years. His work is best described as expressionistic & often utilizes still-life, original photographs and dream imagery as a departure point to convey personal metaphors or emotional responses to life experiences.