Homolovi State Park | |
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Location | Navajo, Arizona, United States |
Coordinates | 35°1′31″N 110°37′44″W / 35.02528°N 110.62889°W |
Area | 4,500 acres (18 km2) |
Established | 1986 |
Visitors | 36,311 (in 2022)[1] |
Governing body | Arizona State Parks |
Homolovi State Park is a state park of Arizona, United States, preserving over 300 Ancestral Puebloan archaeological sites. Homolovi or Homol'ovi (the Hopi spelling of the word) is a Hopi word meaning "place of the little hills". The park is located just over a mile north of Winslow, Arizona, and features historical exhibits, interpretive programs, birdwatching, and hiking. There is a year-round campground, restrooms with showers and an RV dump station.[2][3] The park was closed to visitors from February 22, 2010 to March 18, 2011 due to state budget cuts.[4]
From 1986 to its 2011 reopening, the name of the park was Homolovi Ruins State Park. The Hopi tribe lobbied the Arizona parks board to remove "Ruins" from the name, as the Hopi tribe considers them spiritually alive. During a meeting in Winslow on March 17, 2011, the board unanimously voted to change the name and to add the tagline "ancestral Hopi villages" to the park.[4]