The Town That Blocked the Big Box: Bisbee, Arizona

In a former copper-mining boomtown perched in the Mule Mountains of southeastern Arizona, residents spent years fighting off a big-box retail chain. This episode traces how Bisbee — a town that had already reinvented itself once after the mines closed — chose to protect what it had rebuilt, using zoning, planning boards, and the slow unglamorous machinery of civic life.

The Town That Blocked the Big Box: Bisbee, Arizona
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There's copper stain on the canyon walls around Bisbee, Arizona — great rust-orange streaks bleeding down the limestone, visible from the highway before you even know the town is there. Then you come around a bend in U.S. 80, right at the foot of the Mule Mountains, and the place reveals itself: Victorian storefronts stacked up a steep hillside at angles that shouldn't be legal, narrow streets that dead-end at staircases, a hundred-year-old built environment clinging to the rock at fifty-two hundred feet.
Bisbee began as a copper-mining boomtown in the 1880s and grew, at its peak, to nearly twenty thousand people — a genuine city carved into a canyon. When Phelps Dodge Corporation closed the mines in 1975, it collapsed fast. By the early 1980s, half the population had left. Then something unexpected happened: artists arrived, drawn by cheap rents and intact Victorian bones, and over the following decades the town slowly reinvented itself as an arts colony with a real tourism economy. The identity of the place shifted entirely — from company town to something more voluntary, a community of people who were there because they chose to be.
That shift is what made the next chapter so charged. In the late 1990s and into the early 2000s, big-box retail — Walmart being the name most closely associated in regional accounts — began making moves into small Arizona towns, and the area around Bisbee was part of that pressure. The argument for a chain store was real: lower prices for working families, local jobs, tax revenue. For the working-class residents who had stayed through the mining bust, the gallery economy wasn't always serving their daily needs. The nearest large retail was a real drive away.
But Bisbee's community pushed back. The town's geographic constraints — it sits in a canyon with no flat parcel large enough for a big-box footprint near its historic center — gave local zoning an almost natural advantage. The harder questions were about the flatter land nearby, and those played out through planning commission meetings, county zoning processes, and organized civic pressure from local business owners and residents. No single vote, no famous showdown: just the door slowly not opening, until the pressure moved elsewhere.
EP05 follows the full arc of that story — the history of the mines, the collapse, the arts revival, the retail pressure and the community's response — and takes an honest look at the real tradeoffs. The refusal wasn't free: grocery prices stayed higher, some longtime residents couldn't stay, and the arts-colony economy has real equity tensions that the town is still working through. For contrast, the episode visits Globe, Arizona — a comparable old mining town about two hours north — which made different choices about retail, and where the downtown tells a different story today.
Bisbee is still, somehow, itself. The Copper Queen Hotel is still operating. The Queen Mine tour still runs. And the copper stain is still on the canyon walls.

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