
Lehi’s downtown area retains its Old West charm. Popular attractions include the John Hutchings Museum of Natural History and the city's rodeo grounds that annually play host to the Lehi Roundup, one of the oldest rodeo celebrations still held in the state. Lehi was incorporated on February 5, 1982. It has a population of some 15,000. Eighty percent of the residents own homes.
Utah County is located in north-central Utah, 44 miles south of Salt Lake City, and is part of the larger three-county region known as "Mountainland." Utah County is a series of mountains and valleys. From the Wasatch Mountains on the east, the terrain levels into Utah Valley, where the majority of the county's cities can be found. The average elevation in the valley ranges between 4,300 to 4,700 feet above sea level. Elevations in the mountains can reach up to 11,000 feet above sea level.
The Provo/Orem area has been ranked among the top 20 places to live in the nation (according to Money Magazine) for the past five years. In 1991, the magazine rated the area #1 on its list of the top 300 places in the nation to live. In 1994, the area received the #3 ranking. In 1991, Provo received the "Most Liveable City under 100,000" from the National Conference of Mayors and is considered by Fortune magazine to be the "third high-tech cluster in the U.S." Some of the criteria by which the area was judged were its health-care facilities, crime rate, economy, housing, education, transit, weather, leisure, arts, strength of leadership, and city involvement in quality of life.
The population of Utah County is estimated at 346,000. The area is ranked 58th out of 500 fastest-growing Metropolitan Statistical Areas in the nation, having grown 20.9% from l980 to 1990. The majority of the County's population can be found in the sister cities of Provo (101,000) and Orem (81,500). The remaining population can be found in the 22 incorporated municipalities and towns and in the unincorporated areas of the valley.