Farmington area events calendar lists Market Pavilion ribbon-cutting, concerts, tournaments
Farmington’s new Market Pavilion opens with a ribbon‑cutting March 10, and the Tri‑City Record calendar lists concerts, maker markets, workshops and a March 30 blood drive.

Farmington will mark the opening of a new community venue at McGee Park with a Market Pavilion ribbon‑cutting from 3–5 p.m. Tuesday, March 10, the Tri‑City Record’s weekly events calendar reports. The city’s announcement describes the “new 5,400‑square‑foot multipurpose facility designed to host the Growers Market and a variety of community events with indoor/outdoor capability, a serving kitchen and restrooms.” The free event at McGee Park (41 Rd. 5568) will include on‑site vendors, light refreshments and “complimentary market totes while supplies last,” and the city has posted details at FarmingtonNM.gov/MarketPavilion.
**Market Pavilion ribbon‑cutting and Farmington community calendar** The Market Pavilion is the headline item on the Tri‑City Record calendar published March 3, 2026, but the paper’s round‑up also sketches a broader slate of Farmington‑area programming through April. City leaders and vendors will use the new 5,400‑square‑foot space for Growers Market activity and other community gatherings; that footprint — indoor/outdoor capability plus a serving kitchen and restrooms — changes logistical options for market vendors who previously relied on outdoor setups or smaller indoor venues. The Market Pavilion ribbon‑cutting is free and positioned to serve as a launch for vendor partnerships and seasonal market schedules; the city’s event page is listed as FarmingtonNM.gov/MarketPavilion for vendor and media inquiries.
The calendar includes business, civic and small‑business supports around the same timeframe. An IRS Business Tax Account hybrid session is scheduled Thursday, March 12, 11:30 a.m.–1 p.m. at the SBDC at San Juan College (5101 College Blvd.) to “Learn to access and use the IRS Tax Account to manage payments, notices and authorizations.” The Tri‑City Record excerpt did not supply a registration link or contact; organizers at the SBDC should be contacted to confirm hybrid access and any registration requirements.
Other recurring civic offerings named in the Record’s calendar provide routine community touchpoints: Family Storytime at the Farmington Public Library (2101 Farmington Ave.) is set for Friday, March 13 at 10 a.m. and is described as “A cozy family story hour with books, songs and shared moments that build early literacy and connection.” Quilting & Sewing meets Friday, March 13 at 10:30 a.m. in the Bonnie Dallas Senior Center Annex studio room (208 N. Wall Ave.) with the invitation to “Join others to socialize while working on individual projects. Supply your own materials.” Contact numbers listed in the calendar are (505) 599‑1270 for the library and (505) 566‑2256 for the senior center.
The Record also lists a monthly gathering for educators: Retired Educators of San Juan County is shown in the calendar with a noon block (11:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m.) at No Worries Bar & Grill (1298 W. Navajo St.) and the line “Former teachers, administrators, bus drivers, custodians, librarians and central office staff invited, every second Tuesday of the month.” The placement of that entry in the March 3 calendar appears alongside other March 13 listings; the published text explicitly describes an “every second Tuesday” recurrence, so organizers or the contact listed — marilyn_montoya@yahoo.com or (505) 330‑4811 — should be consulted for the exact meeting date when scheduling attendance.
**Concerts: Julia Keefe, local stages and the Tri‑Cities (WA) live‑music scene** Music is another focus of the Record’s calendar: San Juan College’s Connie Gotsch Theatre will host the Julia Keefe Quartet on Sunday, March 29 at 7 p.m., with $5 admission. The calendar bills the show as “Internationally acclaimed jazz vocalist Julia Keefe (Nez Pearce) will perform live in Farmington.” Tickets and box‑office questions are routed to San Juan College at (505) 566‑3430 or boxoffice@sanjuancollege.edu; the Record’s excerpt suggests a web link may have been omitted from the published details.
Beyond Farmington, the research materials included separate listings from Tricityvibe and Visittri‑cities that apply to the Tri‑Cities in Washington (Kennewick, Richland and Pasco) and must not be conflated with San Juan County events. Those Washington region pages describe a heavy summer calendar of concerts and festivals — Thunder on the Island, Live @ 5, River of Fire fireworks and seasonal farmers’ markets among them — and provide many specific gig listings archived on Tricityvibe. Representative Tricityvibe entries in the excerpt include drive‑time and evening shows such as Dr Rock & The Sturgeons at Live @ 5 on John Dam Plaza (Richland), From The Ashes at Thunder on the Island (Clover Island Stage, Kennewick), and a string of club and winery dates featuring regional acts in Kennewick, Richland and Prosser across 2025–2026.
The Visittri‑cities tourism copy frames those offerings as year‑round draws: “Throughout the year, each of the communities in the Tri‑Cities region — Kennewick, Richland and Pasco — present an exciting array of concerts, races, food festivals, fairs, patriotic celebrations and other annual events perfect for the whole family.” That language signals a predictable pattern of summer concert series and festivals local governments and promoters rely on, but organizers and venues in Washington should be consulted for up‑to‑date 2026 schedules before relying on archived listings; Tricityvibe’s itemized artist/venue notes are useful for historical context and quick venue lookups but are partial in the excerpt available for this report.
**Tournaments, volunteer drives and makers markets: community service and small‑business programming** The Tri‑City Record’s March 3 calendar mixes family programming, small‑business markets and community service offerings that function as the county’s civic infrastructure in spring. The She Means Business Makers Market is scheduled Saturday, March 28, 11 a.m.–3 p.m. at the Walter Collins Center in Upper Fruitland and carries the calendar line: “Join WESST's Farmington Women's Business Center & celebrate Women's history month and support micro businesses.” The excerpt provides contact jhenry@wesst.org but omits a fuller details field; WESST organizers can confirm vendor rosters and whether the market will continue at the new Market Pavilion in season.
Public health and volunteerism appear as well: Enzo’s Auto Sales will host a Vitalant bloodmobile Monday, March 30 from 11 a.m.–2 p.m. at 2833 E Main St.; the calendar notes simply that the “Bloodmobile will be on site.” Appointments are available through 1‑877‑258‑4825 or Vitalant’s scheduling site. That drive is a practical reminder that civic events and donor capacity are tightly coupled — a single mobile drive can shift inventory at regional hospital systems, so organizers’ appointment systems matter to turnout.
Notably, the March 3 calendar excerpt ends with a date — Saturday, April 11 — but supplies no event details; the absence is symptomatic of several blank or truncated “Details:” fields in the published roundup (the IRS hybrid session, the She Means Business market’s initial details entry, and a trailing blank after San Juan College box‑office contact). Those gaps underscore the importance of confirming logistics directly with listed contacts before making plans: use the phone numbers and emails printed in the calendar (library (505) 599‑1270; senior center (505) 566‑2256; marilyn_montoya@yahoo.com / (505) 330‑4811; jhenry@wesst.org; San Juan College box office (505) 566‑3430 or boxoffice@sanjuancollege.edu) to verify times, registration and any admission requirements.
Conclusion The Tri‑City Record’s March 3 events calendar places the Market Pavilion ribbon‑cutting at the center of a busy spring for Farmington — a new 5,400‑square‑foot venue that will host growers, musicians and makers — while the paper’s community listings show a steady mix of literacy programs, crafting groups, business supports and public health drives that sustain civic life. Regional music coverage from Tricityvibe and Visittri‑cities documents a robust festival and concert circuit across the Washington Tri‑Cities, but organizers and venues should be contacted directly for confirmed 2026 dates. Where the calendar leaves blanks or internal inconsistencies (notably the Retired Educators placement and the April 11 entry), the contacts published with each listing remain the authoritative route to confirmation as events approach.
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