If you're considering a move to The Grand, you've probably already read about the four golf courses, the two rec centers, and the activities. This page is different. This is the everyday stuff — Angela's Kitchen for breakfast, Maple & Rye for date nights, the local restaurants outside the community for variety, the bowling alley you'll actually go to, the library you'll get a card from. Then beyond that, what's within a quick drive when you want to leave the area for a day.
The Grand has two flagship restaurants inside the community — Angela's Kitchen at Desert Springs and Maple & Rye at Granite Falls — plus the Camino Del Sol restaurant row in nearby Sun City West (about 8 minutes away). Here are the places residents recommend most often.
The full-service restaurant at Desert Springs Golf Course, inside The Grand. American comfort food with a fresh twist — breakfast is the standout (locals come from outside the community for it). Covered patio overlooks the course. Popular for breakfast meetings, post-round lunches, and casual weekend meals.
The flagship dining experience inside The Grand. Contemporary American at the Granite Falls clubhouse, with picturesque patio seating overlooking the golf course and an open kitchen visible from indoor tables. Part of Westside Concepts (Haymaker, Copper & Sage). Breakfast, lunch, and dinner served daily, 7am to 8pm. Walk-ins welcome — no reservations required. Best patio view in the West Valley, per locals.
The classic post-golf breakfast spot. Solid biscuits and gravy, hash browns, and the kind of diner menu where everybody knows what to order. Reliably busy mornings. One of the most reviewed spots in The Grand (170+ TripAdvisor reviews).
The locally-loved pizza spot in Sundome Plaza. Pepperoni and Canadian bacon are the residents' picks; gluten-free crust available. Casual, affordable, easy takeout. Frequently mentioned in resident reviews as "one of the best around."
Affordable Mexican with vegetarian options. One of the few sit-down Mexican spots inside The Grand proper — most other options are over in Surprise. A reliable lunch or casual dinner.
Chinese-American classics. The lunch specials are the call — main entrée, egg roll, soup, and wonton at a good price. Delivery and takeout available, with vegan options on the menu. Reviews are mixed but locals come back for the lunch deals.
The Lizard. The community's social pub — recently renovated and reopened in October 2025 with a bigger bar, more booths, an expanded dance floor, and big-screen TVs. Live music, karaoke, trivia, dart boards, shuffleboard — and located inside the R.H. Johnson Sports Pavilion alongside the bowling alley and billiards. The name pays tribute to the Circle One Livestock Company ranch that occupied this land before Del Webb arrived in 1976.
Yes — there's a real wine and beer bar inside the Fry's grocery store. A surprisingly civilized place to grab a glass of wine or a craft IPA while you're shopping (or instead of shopping). Murray's Cheese counter is right there. Quirky, social, and a The Grand original.
30 lanes of bowling in a state-of-the-art alley, plus a billiards hall with 27 pool tables, a billiards table, and a snooker table — one of the largest cue-sports facilities in any 55+ community. The active Men's Billiards Club hosts leagues and tournaments. Lizard Acres Pub is right inside, so it's the easiest one-stop social outing in The Grand.
The instantly recognizable building with the clock tower and chimes at the heart of The Grand. 14,000 sq ft, 45,000+ books, videos, and audio. Operated as a private community library — your RCSCW recreation card is your library card. Supported by the Friends of the R.H. Johnson Library through fundraisers and donations.
The cultural heart of The Grand. Concerts, plays, classic movies, talent showcases, and community events year-round. Great sightlines from every seat, comfortable, and welcoming. Local talent shares the stage with touring acts; ticket prices stay reasonable.
The full-service restaurant inside Grandview Golf Course. Breakfast, lunch, casual dinner — and a great post-round option. Pizza is surprisingly good for a golf clubhouse, and the views over the course are tough to beat.
Most of your weekly social life happens within a 10-minute drive. Between Angela's Kitchen and Maple & Rye inside the community, the Camino Del Sol restaurant row in Sun City West, and the broader Surprise retail corridor along Bell Road, you can live for years in The Grand and almost never need to drive far for everyday meals and entertainment. That's by design — Del Webb built The Grand to be self-sufficient, and Surprise has grown up around it to provide everything else.
The Grand sits in northern Surprise, just off Loop 303 — close enough to Phoenix for a day trip, but with major attractions even closer.
Hiking trails, ancient petroglyphs, picnic areas, mountain views. The most-visited day-hike spot for Grand residents.
Home of the Arizona Cardinals (NFL). Hosts Super Bowls, Final Fours, and major concerts. The closest major venue to SCW.
Restaurants, shops, movie theatres, year-round events. Right next to State Farm Stadium and Desert Diamond Arena.
Spring training home of the Kansas City Royals and Texas Rangers. February–March games are a snowbird tradition.
Spring training for the Cleveland Guardians and Cincinnati Reds. A second baseball option during March.
Boating, fishing, picnicking, kayaking. Arizona's closest desert lake to SCW — and one of the most scenic.
Regional shopping mall with 135+ stores, 14-screen movie theatre, and dozens of restaurants.
Top-rated hospital specializing in geriatric care, cardiology, orthopedics, emergency. Right inside The Grand.
Half the magic of living in The Grand is everything within an easy drive. These are the day-trips that turn a Saturday into a memory.
The most photographed landscape in Arizona. Hiking, art galleries, Pink Jeep tours, and the famous red sandstone formations.
Pro sports (Suns, Diamondbacks, Coyotes), concerts at Footprint Center, Old Town Scottsdale, museums, and high-end dining.
Cooler temperatures year-round. Skiing in winter, Lowell Observatory, Northern Arizona University, and a launch point for the Grand Canyon.
The Heard is one of the best Native American art museums in the country. Phoenix Art Museum hosts world-class touring exhibits.
Arizona's "Dude Ranch Capital." Old West history, the Desert Caballeros Western Museum, and Vulture City — a real preserved 1860s mining ghost town.
Two of Arizona's top casino-resort destinations. Spring training for the Diamondbacks & Rockies is at Salt River Fields right next to Talking Stick.