The
City and County of Denver (pronounced /ˈdɛnvɚ/) is
the capital and the most populous city of the state of
Colorado
, in the
United
States
. Denver is a
consolidated city-county located in
the
South Platte River Valley on
the
High Plains just
east of the
Front Range of the
Rocky Mountains. The Denver downtown
district is located immediately east of the confluence of
Cherry Creek with the
South Platte River, approximately east of
the
foothills of the Rocky Mountains.
Denver is
nickname the
Mile-High City because its official
elevation is exactly one mile, or 5,280 feet
(1,609 m) above
sea level.
The 105th meridian west of Greenwich passes
through Union Station
, making it the reference point for the Mountain Time Zone. The city of Denver's
area is much smaller than that of Colorado's second most populous
city, Colorado
Springs
.
The
United States Census
Bureau estimated that the population of Denver was 598,707 in
2008, making it the
24th most populous
U.S. city. The 10-county
Denver-Aurora
Metropolitan Statistical Area had an estimated 2008 population
of 2,506,626 and ranked as the
21st most
populous U.S. metropolitan statistical area and the 12-county
Denver-Aurora-Boulder
Combined Statistical Area had an estimated 2008 population of
3,049,562 and ranked as the
16th
most populous U.S. metropolitan area.
It is also the
second-largest city in the Mountain
West after Phoenix
.
Denver is the largest city in the
Front Range Urban Corridor, with
a
Combined statistical
area stretching across eighteen counties in two states. The
population of the Front Range Urban Corridor CSA is estimated at
4,251,663. The city has the tenth-largest
central business district in the United
States.
History
Denver City was founded in November 1858 as a mining town during
the
Pikes Peak Gold Rush in
western
Kansas Territory.
That
summer, a group of gold prospectors from Lawrence
, Kansas
, arrived and
established Montana City on the banks
of the South Platte River.
This was the first settlement in what was later to become the city
of Denver.
The site faded quickly, however, and was
abandoned in favor of Auraria (named
after the gold-mining town of Auraria
, Georgia
) and St. Charles City by the summer of 1859.
The
Montana City site is now Grant-Frontier Park
and includes mining equipment and a log cabin replica.
On
November 22, 1858, General William
Larimer, a land speculator from eastern Kansas
, placed
cottonwood logs to stake a
claim on the hill overlooking the confluence of the South Platte River and Cherry Creek, across the creek from
the existing mining settlement of Auraria. Larimer named the
town site Denver City to curry favor with Kansas Territorial
Governor
James W. Denver. Larimer hoped that the town's name
would help make it the
county seat of
Arapaho County, but unknown to him Governor Denver had already
resigned from office. The location was accessible to existing
trails and was across the South Platte River from the site of
seasonal encampments of the
Cheyenne and
Arapaho. The site of these first towns is
now the site of
Confluence Park in
downtown Denver. Larimer, along with associates in the St. Charles
City Land Company, sold parcels in the town to merchants and
miners, with the intention of creating a major city that would
cater to new emigrants. Denver City was a frontier town, with an
economy based on servicing local miners with gambling, saloons,
livestock and goods trading. In the early years, land parcels were
often traded for
grubstakes or gambled
away by miners in Auraria.
Colorado Territory was created on
February 28, 1861,
Arapahoe County was formed
on November 1, 1861, and Denver City was incorporated on November
7, 1861. Denver City served as the Arapahoe County Seat from 1861
until
consolidation in
1902. In 1865, Denver City became the
Territorial Capital. With its new-found
importance, Denver City shortened its name to just Denver. On
August 1, 1876, Denver became the State Capital when Colorado was
admitted to the
Union.
Between 1880-1895 the city experienced a huge rise in city
corruption, as crime bosses, such as
Soapy
Smith, worked side-by-side with elected officials and the
police to control the elections, gambling, and the bunko gangs. In
1887, the precursor to the international charity
United Way was formed in Denver by
local religious leaders who raised funds and coordinated various
charities to help Denver's poor.
By 1890, Denver had grown to be the second
largest city west of Omaha
, but by 1900
it had dropped to third place behind San Francisco
and Los
Angeles
.
In 1901
the Colorado General
Assembly voted to split Arapahoe County into three parts: a new
consolidated City and
County of Denver, a new Adams County
, and the remainder of the Arapahoe County to be
renamed South Arapahoe
County. A ruling by the Colorado
Supreme Court
, subsequent legislation,
and a referendum delayed the creation of
the City and County of Denver until November 15, 1902.
Denver has hosted the
Democratic National
Convention twice, during the years of
1908, and again in
2008, taking the
opportunity to promote the city's status on the national,
political, and socioeconomic stage.
Early in the 20th century, Denver, like many other cities, was home
to a pioneering brass age
automobile
company;
Colburn was copied
from the contemporary
Renault.
Denver
was selected in 1970 to host the 1976 Winter Olympics to coincide with
Colorado's centennial celebration, but in
November 1972 Colorado voters struck down ballot initiatives
allocating public funds to pay for the high costs of the games,
subsequently the games were moved to Innsbruck
, Austria
. The notoriety of becoming the only city
ever to decline to host an Olympiad after being selected has made
subsequent bids difficult. The movement against hosting the games
was based largely on environmental issues and was led by then State
Representative
Richard Lamm, who was
subsequently elected to three terms (1974-86) as
Colorado governor.
Denver has also been known historically as the
Queen City of
the Plains because of its important role in the
agricultural industry of
the plains regions along the foothills of the
Colorado Front Range. Several
US Navy ships have been named
USS Denver in honor of the city.
Geography

Satellite image of the Denver
Metropolitan area
Denver is located in the center of the
Front Range Urban Corridor,
between the
Rocky Mountains to the
west and the
High Plains to the east.
According to the
United
States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of
154.9 square miles (401.3 km²), of which 1.6 square
miles (4.1 km²), or 1.03%, is water.
The City and County
of Denver is surrounded by only three other counties: Adams
County
to the north and east, Arapahoe
County
to the south and east, and Jefferson
County
to the west.
Climate
Denver has a
semi-arid climate (
Köppen climate
classification BSk) with four distinct seasons.
While
Denver is located on the Great Plains
, the weather of the city and surrounding area is
heavily influenced by the proximity of the Rocky Mountains to the west. The
climate is considered a high-desert climate. While generally mild
compared to the mountains to the west and the plains further east,
it can be very unpredictable. Before the city's settlement, the
Denver landscape was made up of primarily prairie and desert lands.
Because Denver and most of its suburbs sit in a "bowl", the city is
often protected from harsh cold and strong winds. Measurable
amounts of snow have fallen in the Denver area as late as June and
as early as September.
The average temperature in Denver is 50.1 °F (10.1 °C), and the
average yearly precipitation is 15.81 inches (402 mm).
The season's first snowfall generally occurs around October 19, and
the last snowfall is about April 27, averaging 61.4 inches
(156 cm) of seasonal accumulation. The
National Weather Service records an
annual average of sunshine during 69 percent of all possible
daylight hours.
Denver's winters can vary from mild to cold, and although large
amounts of snow can fall on the mountains just west of the city,
the effects of
orographic lift dry
out the air passing over the
Front
Range, shielding the city from precipitation for much of the
season. Additionally, warm
chinook
winds occasionally occur as air passing over the mountains
heats as it descends, quickly melting snow accumulations and making
Denver's winters milder than areas without this effect. The coldest
temperature ever recorded in Denver was recorded on January 9, 1875
at -39 °F (-39.5 °C), and the last time Denver recorded a
temperature below -20 °F (-29 °C) was during February 2007, when
the low temperature was -22 °F (-30 °C).
Spring brings with it significant changes as Denver can be affected
by
air masses on all sides. Arctic air from
the north can often combine with Pacific storm fronts bringing snow
to the city. In fact, March is Denver's snowiest month, averaging
11.7 inches (29.7 cm) of snow.
Additionally, warm
air from the Gulf of
Mexico
can bring the first thunderstorms of the season, and continental
warm air can bring summer-like warm and dry
conditions.
Starting in mid-July, the
monsoon brings
tropical moisture into the city and with it come frequent short
(and occasionally severe) late-afternoon thunderstorms. However,
despite this tropical moisture, humidity levels during the day
generally remain low. The average high during the summer is 88 °F
(31 °C) and the average low is 59 °F (15 °C). The hottest
temperature ever recorded in Denver is 105°F (41 °C) (National
Weather Service).
In the autumn, the tropical monsoon flow dies down and as Arctic
air begins to approach, it can combine with moisture from the
Pacific Northwest to bring
significant snowfall to the city – November is Denver's second
snowiest month, and Denver's greatest recorded snowfall from a
single storm, 45.7 inches (116 cm), fell in late autumn
from December 1 to December 6, 1913.
Neighborhoods
The City and County of Denver has defined 79 official
neighborhoods that the city and community
groups use for planning and administration. Although the city's
delineation of the neighborhood boundaries is somewhat arbitrary,
it corresponds roughly to the definitions used by residents. These
"neighborhoods" should not be confused with cities or suburbs,
which are separate entities within the metro area.
These neighborhoods' character vary significantly from each other
and include everything from large
skyscrapers to turn of the twentieth century
houses to modern,
suburban style
developments. Generally, the neighborhoods closest to the city
center are denser, older and contain more brick building material.
Many neighborhoods away from the city center were developed after
World War II, and are built with more modern materials and style.
Some of the neighborhoods even farther from the city center, or
recently redeveloped parcels anywhere in the city have either very
suburban characteristics or are
new
urbanist developments that attempt to recreate the feel of
older neighborhoods. Most neighborhoods contain parks or other
features that are the focal point for the neighborhood.
Denver also has a number of neighborhoods not reflected in the
administrative boundaries. Sometimes, these neighborhoods reflect
the way people in an area identify themselves; sometimes, they
reflect how others, such as real estate developers, have defined
those areas.
Well-known neighborhoods include the
historic and trendy LoDo (short for "Lower
Downtown"), part of the city's Union Station neighborhood; Capitol Hill, Highland
, Washington Park
, Lowry
; Uptown,
part of the North Capitol Hill neighborhood; Curtis Park, part of
the Five Points neighborhood;
Alamo Placita, the northern part of
the Speer neighborhood; Park Hill,
a successful example of intentional racial integration; and
Golden Triangle,
in the Civic Center.
Parks and recreation
When Denver was founded in 1858, the city was little more than a
dusty collection of buildings on a long, grassy plain with a few
contorted
cottonwood and
willow trees on riverbanks.
As of 2006, Denver
has over 200 parks, from small mini-parks all over the city to the
giant 314 acre (1.3 km²) City Park
. Denver also has 29 recreation centers
providing places and programming for resident's recreation and
relaxation.
of Denver's parks were acquired from state lands in the late 19th
and early 20th centuries. This coincided with the
City Beautiful movement, and legendary Denver
mayor Robert Speer (1904-12 and 1916-18) set out to expand and
beautify the city's parks.
Reinhard Schuetze was the city's first
landscape architect, and he
brought his German-educated landscaping genius to Washington
Park
, Cheesman
Park, and City
Park
among others. Speer used Schuetze
as well as other landscape architects such as Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. and
Saco Rienk DeBoer to design not
only parks such as Civic Center Park
, but many city parkways and tree-lawns. All
of this greenery was fed with
South
Platte River water diverted through the city ditch.
addition to the parks within Denver itself, the city acquired land
for mountain parks starting in the 1910s.
Over the years,
Denver has acquired, built and maintained approximately 14,000
acres (56 km²) of mountain parks, including Red Rocks
Park
, which is known for its scenery and musical history
revolving around the unique Red Rocks Amphitheatre
. Denver also owns the hill on which the
Winter Park
Resort
ski area is operated in Grand
County
, west of Denver. City parks are important
places for both Denverites and visitors, inciting controversy with
every change.
Denver continues to grow its park system
with the development of many new parks along the Platte River
through the city, and with Central Park and Bluff Lake Nature Center in the
Stapleton
neighborhood redevelopment. All of these
parks are important gathering places for residents and allow what
was once a dry plain to be lush, active, and green.
Since 1974, Denver and the surrounding jurisdictions have
rehabilitated the urban South Platte River and its tributaries for
recreational use by hikers and cyclists.
The main stem of the
South Platte River Greenway runs along the South Platte from
Chatfield
Reservoir
into Adams
County in the north. The Greenway project is recognized as
one of the best urban reclamation projects in the U.S., winning,
for example, the Silver Medal Rudy Bruner Award for Urban
Excellence in 2001.
Demographics
The
United States Census
Bureau estimates that, in 2008, the population of the City and
County of Denver was 598,707, making it the
24th most populous
U.S. city. The
Denver-Aurora
Metropolitan Statistical Area had an estimated 2008 population
of 2,506,626 and ranked as the
21st most
populous U.S. metropolitan statistical area, and the larger
Denver-Aurora-Boulder
Combined Statistical Area had an estimated 2008 population of
3,049,562 and ranked as the
17th
most populous U.S. metropolitan area. Denver is the most
populous city within a
radius centered in the
city and of magnitude. Denverites is a term used for residents of
Denver (city or county).
According to census estimates, the City and County of Denver
contains approximately 566,974 people (2006) and 239,235 households
(2000). The
population density is
3,698/sq mi (1,428/km²) including the airport. There are
268,540 housing units (2005) at an average density of
1,751/sq mi (676/km²). However, the average density throughout
most Denver neighborhoods tends to be higher. Without the 80249 zip
code (47.3 sq mi, 8,407 residents) near the airport, the
average density increases to around 5,470/sq mi.
At the 2005-2007
American
Community Survey conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau,
White Americans made up 72.4% of Denver's
population; of which 50.5% were non-Hispanic
whites.
Blacks or
African Americans made up 9.9% of
Denver's population; of which 9.7% were non-Hispanic blacks.
American Indian
made up 1.1% of the city's population; of which 0.7% were
non-Hispanic.
Asian Americans made up
3.2% of the city's population; of which 3.1% were non-Hispanic.
Pacific Islander Americans
made up 0.1% of the city's population. Individuals from some other
race made up 10.9% of the city's population; of which 0.3% were
non-Hispanic. Individuals from
two
or more races made up 2.4% of the city's population; of which
1.4% were non-Hispanic. In addition,
Hispanics and Latinos made up
34.2% of Denver's population.
About 69.9% of the city's population spoke only
English at home and 23.9% spoke
Spanish. About 37.7% of Denver's population
had a Bachelor's degree or higher.
There are 250,906 households, of which 23.2% have children under
the age of 18 living with them, 34.7% are
married couples living together, 10.8% have a
female householder with no husband present, and 50.1% are
non-families. 39.3% of all households are made up of individuals
and 9.4% have someone living alone who is 65 years of age or older.
The average household size is 2.27 and the average family size is
3.14.
Age distribution is 22.0% under the age of 18, 10.7% from 18 to 24,
36.1% from 25 to 44, 20.0% from 45 to 64, and 11.3% who are 65
years of age or older. The median age is 33 years. For every 100
females there are 102.1 males.
The
median household income
is $41,767, and the median family income is $48,195.Males have a
median income of $36,232 versus $33,768 for females. The
per capita income for the city is $24,101.
14.3% of the population and 10.6% of families are below the
poverty line. Out of the total
population, 20.3% of those under the age of 18 and 9.7% of those 65
and older are living below the poverty line.
Government

Denver City and County Building (circa
1941), looking west.

Denver City and County Building with
Christmas decorations (1955).

Vietnam War Memorial Obelisk with
Denver City and County Building in background.
Denver is a
consolidated
city-county with a
mayor elected on a
nonpartisan ballot, a 13-member
city council and an
auditor. The
Denver
City Council is elected from 11 districts with two at-large
council-members and is responsible for passing and changing all
laws, resolutions, and ordinances, usually after a public hearing.
They can also call for misconduct investigations of Denver's
departmental officials.
Denver has a strong mayor/weak city council government. The mayor
can approve or
veto any ordinances or
resolutions approved by the council, makes sure all contracts with
the city are kept and performed, signs all bonds and contracts, is
responsible for the city budget, and can appoint people to various
city departments, organizations, and commissions. However, the
council can override the mayor's veto with a nine out of thirteen
member vote, and the city budget must be approved and can be
changed by a simple majority vote of the council. The auditor
checks all expenditures and may refuse to allow specific ones,
usually based on financial reasons.
All elected officials have four-year terms, with a maximum of three
terms. While Denver elections are non-partisan,
Democrats have long held a
majority sway on Denver politics with most officials elected
citywide having Democratic Party affiliation. In federal elections,
Denverites also tend to vote for Democratic candidates, voting for
the Democratic Presidential nominee in every election since 1960
(excluding 1980 and 1972). The office of Denver's Mayor has been
occupied by a Democrat since the municipal general election of
1963, including the current mayor,
John Hickenlooper.
Denver is represented
at the federal level by congresswoman Diana DeGette, a Democrat representing
Colorado's 1st
congressional district, which includes all of Denver and parts
of Arapahoe
County
.
Benjamin F. Stapleton was the mayor of Denver,
Colorado for two periods, the first from 1923–1931 and the second
from 1935–1947. Stapleton was responsible for many civic
improvements during his term, notably during his second stint as
mayor when he had access to funds and manpower from the
New Deal. During this time, the park system was
considerably expanded and the Civic Center completed. His signature
project was the construction of Denver Municipal Airport, which
began in 1929 amidst heavy criticism.
It was later renamed
Stapleton
International Airport
in his honor. Today, the airport no longer
stands, but has been replaced by a neighborhood also named
Stapleton. Stapleton Street continues to bear his name. After
Stapleton left office, it was discovered that he was tied to the
Ku Klux Klan, which enjoyed
considerable influence in return for its electoral support. This
association continues to overshadow contributions to Denver's
economic and cultural institutions.
During the 1960s and 1970s, Denver was one of the epicenters of the
Chicano Movement. The
boxer-turned-activist
Rodolfo "Corky"
Gonzales formed an organization called the Crusade for Justice,
which battled police brutality, fought for bilingual education,
and, most notably, hosted the First National Chicano Youth
Liberation Conference in March 1969.
In recent years, Denver has taken a stance on helping people who
are or become
homeless, particularly
under the administrations of mayors
John Hickenlooper and
Wellington Webb. Denver's homeless
population is considerably lower than many other major cities, but
residents of the city streets have suffered during Denver's
winters. Although mild and dry much of the time, Denver's winters
can have brief periods of cold temperatures and varying amounts of
snow. As a result, the city has set a national precedent on
homeless services, with the creations of a ten-year plan to end
homelessness (a plan now becoming popular in other cities as well),
a task force and commission to end homelessness, and an expansion
of human and civil services through the Denver area.
In 2005, Denver became the first major city in the U.S. to make the
private possession of less than an ounce of
marijuana legal for adults 21 and older. The
city voted 53.49-46.51 percent in favor of the
marijuana legalization measure. This
initiative does not usurp state law, which currently treats
marijuana possession in much the same way as a speeding ticket with
fines of up to $100 and no jail time. The electorate of Colorado
voted on and rejected a similar state-wide initiative in November
2006.Denver passed an initiative in the fourth quarter of 2007
requiring the mayor to appoint an 11 member review panel to monitor
the city's compliance with the 2005 ordinance.
Current Denver mayor
John Hickenlooper is a member of the Mayors Against Illegal
Guns Coalition, an organization formed in 2006 and co-chaired
by New York
City
mayor Michael
Bloomberg and Boston
mayor Thomas
Menino.
Denver hosted the
2008 Democratic National
Convention, which was coincidentally the centennial of the
city's first hosting of the landmark 1908 convention. It also
hosted the
G7 (now G8) summit between June 20 and
June 22 in 1997 and the 2000 National Convention of the
Green Party.
Economy
Denver's economy is based partially on its geographic position and
its connection to some of the major transportation systems of the
country. Because Denver is the largest city within , it has become
a natural location for storage and distribution of goods and
services to the
Mountain States.
Denver is
also approximately halfway between the large cities of the Midwest like Chicago
and St.
Louis
and the cities of the West Coast, another benefit
for distribution. Over the years, the city has been home to
other large corporations in the central United States, making
Denver a key trade point for the country.
Several well known companies originated in or have relocated to
Denver. William Ainsworth opened the
Denver Instrument Company in 1895
to make analytical balances for gold assayers.
Its factory is now in
Arvada
. Also Samsonite
Corp., the world’s largest luggage manufacturer, began in Denver in
1910 as Shwayder Trunk Manufacturing Company but Samsonite closed
its NE Denver factory in 2001, and moved its headquarters to
Massachusetts
after a change of ownership in 2006. The
Mountain States Telephone &
Telegraph Company, founded in Denver in 1911, is now a part of
telecommunications giant
Qwest. The
Gates Corporation, the world’s largest
producer of automotive belts and hoses, was established in S.
Denver in 1919.
Russell Stover
Candies Inc. made its first chocolate candy in Denver in 1923,
but moved to Kansas City in 1969. The
Wright & McGill Company has
been making its Eagle Claw brand of fishing gear in NE Denver since
1925.
The
original Frontier
Airlines began operations at Denver’s old Stapleton
International Airport
in 1950. Frontier
was reincarnated at DIA
in 1994. Scott’s Liquid Gold, Inc.,
has been making furniture polish in Denver since 1954.
Village Inn restaurants began as a single
pancake house in Denver in 1958.
Big O Tires,
LLC, of Centennial
opened its first franchise in 1962 in
Denver. The Shane Company
sold its first diamond jewelry in 1971 in Denver.
Johns Manville Corp., a manufacturer of
insulation and roofing products, relocated its headquarters to
Denver from New York in 1972.
CH2M HILL
Inc., an engineering and construction firm, relocated from Oregon
to the
Denver Technological
Center in 1980.
The Ball Corp.
sold its glass business in Indiana in the 1990s and moved to
suburban Broomfield
. Ball has several operations in greater
Denver.
Molson Coors
Brewing Company established its U.S. headquarters in Denver in
2005. Its
subsidiary and regional
wholesale distributor,
Coors Distributing Company, is in
NW Denver. The
Newmont Mining
Corporation, the largest gold producer in North America and one
of the largest in the world, is headquartered in Denver. Large
Denver-area employers that have headquarters elsewhere include
Lockheed Martin Corp.,
United Airlines,
Kroger Co. and
Xcel
Energy, Inc.
Downtown Skyline in August, 1964.
Includes the old Cosmopolitan Hotel, since demolished.
Geography also allows Denver to have a considerable government
presence, with many federal agencies based or having offices in the
Denver area.
In fact, the Denver-Aurora Metropolitan
Area has more federal workers than any other metropolitan area
except for the Washington, D.C.
metropolitan area. Along with the
plethora of federal agencies come many companies based on US
defense and space projects, and more jobs are brought to the city
by virtue of its being the capital of the state of Colorado
. The Denver area is home to the former
nuclear weapons plant Rocky
Flats
, the Denver Federal Center
, the Denver
Mint
and the National Renewable Energy
Laboratory.
In 2005,
a $310.7 million expansion for the Colorado
Convention Center
was completed, roughly doubling its size.
The hope was that the center's expansion would elevate the city to
one of the top 10 cities in the nation for holding a convention.
Denver's position near the mineral-rich
Rocky Mountains encouraged mining and energy
companies to spring up in the area. In the early days of the city,
gold and silver booms and busts played a large role in the economic
success of the city. In the 1970s and early 1980s, the energy
crisis in America created an energy boom in Denver captured in the
soap opera
Dynasty.
Denver was built up considerably during this time with the
construction of many new downtown skyscrapers, see
List of tallest buildings in
Denver. When the price of oil dropped from $34 a barrel in 1981
to $9 a barrel in 1986 the Denver economy dropped with it, leaving
almost 15,000 oil industry workers in the area unemployed
(including current mayor
John
Hickenlooper, a former geologist), and the highest office
vacancy rate in the nation (30%). Energy and mining are still
important in Denver's economy today, with companies such as
EnCana,
Halliburton,
Smith International,
Rio Tinto Group,
Newmont Mining,
Noble
Energy, and
Anadarko.
Denver's west-central geographic location in the Mountain Time Zone
(UTC -7) also benefits the telecommunications industry by allowing
communication with both North American coasts, South America,
Europe, and Asia in the same business day. Denver's location on the
105th meridian at over in elevation also enables it to be the
largest city in the U.S. to offer a 'one-bounce' real-time
satellite uplink to six continents in the same business day.
Qwest Communications,
Dish Network Corporation,
Starz-Encore,
DIRECTV, and
Comcast are just
a few of the telecommunications companies with operations in the
Denver area. These and other high-tech companies had a boom in
Denver in the mid to late 1990s. Denver currently has one of the
lowest unemployment rates in the nation at 3.8 percent as of
October 2007. The Downtown region has seen increased real estate
investment with the construction of new skyscrapers.
Denver has also enjoyed success as a pioneer in the fast casual
restaurant industry, with many of these restaurants founded and
based in Denver. Both
Chipotle
Mexican Grill and
Quizno's were founded
and are currently headquartered in Denver. Additionally,
Qdoba Mexican Grill and
Noodles & Company both originated
in Denver, but have moved their headquarters to nearby
suburbs.
Media
The Denver Metropolitan Area is served by a variety of media
outlets in print, radio, television, and the Internet. Denver is
the #16 market in the country for television, according to the
2009-2010
Nielsen DMA's.
Some stations, such as KWGN
and
KRMA, are broadcast regionally to areas that do
not have their own network affiliations. KWGN
2, the CW
affiliate, is owned and operated by Tribune Media of Chicago.
KWGN is
the direct sister station to WGN
Chicago. KCNC
4 is the
CBS owned and operated station. KRMA 6 serves as a holding company (Rocky Mountain
PBS) and broadcasts signals to a variety of affiliates, including
Pueblo (KTSC-TV), Grand Junction (KRMJ) and other stations in New Mexico
, Nebraska
, Wyoming
, and Kansas
.
Channel 6 generally serves those who cannot receive an over-the-air
signal (such as a
Superstation).
KBDI
12 is
another Denver PBS affiliate, making the Denver market one of only
a few markets with 2 PBS stations. KMGH
7 is the
ABC affiliate, owned and operated by McGraw-Hill. KUSA
9 is the
NBC affiliate, owned and operated by Gannett
Communications. KDVR
31 is the
Fox affiliate, owned and operated by Local
TV LLC. KTVD
20 was
formerly the UPN affiliate, but when the CW was launched, KWGN
won the
affiliation and subsequently the MyNetworkTV affiliation was given
to KTVD
.
KCEC
50 is the
Univision affiliate. KWHD-TV
53, Digital 46 is the LeSea Broadcasting station.
Denver is also served by over 40 AM and FM radio stations, covering
a wide variety of formats and styles. Denver radio is the #21
market in the United States, according to the Fall 2008
Arbitron ranking.For a list of radio stations, see
Radio Stations in
Colorado
After a continued rivalry between Denver's two main newspapers, the
Denver Post and
Rocky Mountain News, the papers
merged operations in 2001 under a Joint Operating Agreement which
formed the Denver Newspaper Agency until February 2009 when E. W.
Scripps, the owner of the Rocky Mountain News closed the paper.
There are also several alternative or localized newspapers
published in Denver, including
Westword,
Denver Daily News,
The Onion,
Tidbits - Denver Metro Area
and
Out Front Colorado.
Denver is home to multiple regional magazines such as
5280, which takes its name from the city's 5280 feet (1609
m) high elevation, and
Denver Magazine, which highlights the finer
things Denver has to offer.
Transportation
City streets
Most of Denver has a straightforward
street
grid oriented to the four
cardinal directions. Blocks are usually
identified in hundreds from the median streets, identified as "00",
which are Broadway (the east–west median, running north–south) and
Ellsworth Avenue (the north–south median, running east–west).
Colfax Avenue, the major east-west
artery through Denver, is 15 blocks (1500) north of the median.
Avenues north of Ellsworth are numbered (with the exception of
Colfax Avenue and a few others), while avenues south of Ellsworth
are named.
There is also an older downtown grid system that was designed to be
parallel to the confluence of the
South Platte River and
Cherry Creek. Most of the streets
downtown and in
LoDo run northeast-southwest
and northwest-southeast. This system has an unplanned benefit for
snow removal; if the streets were in a normal N-S/E-W grid, only
the N-S streets would receive sunlight. With the grid oriented to
the diagonal directions, the NW-SE streets receive sunlight to melt
snow in the morning and the NE-SW streets receive it in the
afternoon. This idea was from Henry Brown the founder of the
Brown Palace Hotel. There is now
a plaque across the street from the
Brown Palace Hotel which honors this
idea. The NW-SE streets are numbered, while the NE-SW streets are
named. The named streets start at the intersection of Colfax Avenue
and Broadway with the block-long Cheyenne Place. The numbered
streets start underneath the Colfax and I-25 viaducts. There are 27
named and 44 numbered streets on this grid. There are also a few
vestiges of the old grid system in the normal grid, such as Park
Avenue, Morrison Road, and Speer Boulevard. Larimer Street, named
after
William Larimer, Jr., the
founder of Denver, which is located in the heart of
LoDo, is the oldest street in Denver.

Cherry Creek Bike trail, running
between the lanes of Speer Blvd
All roads in the downtown grid system are streets.
(16th
Street
, Stout Street) Roads outside of that system that
travel east/west are given the suffix "avenue" and those that head
north and south are given the "street" suffix. (Example,
Colfax Avenue, Lincoln Street,). Boulevards are higher capacity
streets and will travel any direction (more commonly North and
South). Smaller roads are sometimes referred to as places, drives
or courts. Most streets outside of the area between Broadway and
Colorado Boulevard are organized alphabetically from the city's
center.
Confusion may arise where the two grid systems meet, especially
given downtown Denver's one way streets. The system can be easily
navigated with the help of directional signs. The mountains to the
west also offer a great compass-point for those attempting to drive
in the Mile High City.
Many Denver streets have
bicycle
lanes, and there are over 850 miles of paved, off-road, bike
paths in Denver parks and along bodies of water, like Cherry Creek
and the South Platte. This allows for a significant portion of
Denver's population to be bicycle commuters and has led to Denver
being known as a bicycle friendly city.
Denver is the birthplace of the
Denver
Boot, a car-disabling device that is the bane of parking-ticket
scofflaws the world over.
Freeways and highways

I-25 during rush hour
Denver is primarily served by the interstate freeways
I-25 and
I-70.
The intersection of
the two interstates is referred to locally as "the
mousetrap
", because when viewed from the air, the junction
(and subsequent vehicles) resemble mice in a large trap.
Interstate 25 runs
north-south from New
Mexico
through Denver to Wyoming
Interstate 225 traverses
neighboring Aurora
. I-225 was designed to link Aurora with I-25 in the
southeastern corner of Denver, and I-70 to the north of Aurora,
with construction starting May 1964 and ending May 21, 1976.
Interstate 70 runs
east-west from Utah
to
Maryland
.
Interstate 76 begins from
I-70 just west of the city in Arvada
. It intersects I-25 north of the city and runs
northeast to Nebraska where it ends at I-80.
US 6 follows the
alignment of 6th Avenue west of I-25, and connects downtown Denver
to the west-central suburbs of Golden
and Lakewood
. It continues west through Utah and Nevada to
Bishop, California. To the east, it continues as far as
Provincetown, on Cape Cod in Massachusetts.
US 36 connects Denver to
Boulder
and Rocky Mountain National Park
near Estes Park
. It runs east into Ohio
, after
crossing four other states.
Denver also has a nearly complete beltway known as "the 470's".
These are
SH 470 (also known as C-470),
a freeway in the southwest Metro area, and two toll highways,
E-470 (from southeast to northeast) and
Northwest Parkway (from terminus
of E-470 to
US-36).
SH 470
was originally intended to be I-470 and built with federal highway
funds, but the funding was redirected to complete downtown Denver's
16th
Street
to a pedestrian mall. As a result,
construction was delayed until 1980 after state and local
legislation was passed.
A highway expansion and transit project for the southern
I-25 corridor, dubbed T-REX
(
Transportation
Expansion Project), was completed on November 17, 2006. The
project installed wider and additional highway lanes, and improved
highway access and drainage. The project also includes a light rail
line that traverses from downtown to the south end of the metro
area at Lincoln Avenue. The project spanned almost along the
highway with an additional line traveling parallel to part of
I-225, stopping just short
of Parker Road.
Metro Denver highway conditions can be accessed on the
Colorado Department of
Transportation website
Traffic
Conditions.
Mass transportation

Denver RTD Light Rail car at Colfax
& Auraria

Denver Union Station
Mass transportation throughout the
Denver-Aurora
metropolitan area is managed and coordinated by the
Regional Transportation
District (RTD). RTD currently operates more than 1,000
buses serving over 10,000 bus stops in 38 municipal
jurisdictions in eight counties around the
Denver-Aurora
and Boulder Metropolitan Areas. Additionally, RTD operates six
light rail lines, the C, D, E, F, G,and H
with a total of 34.9 miles (56 km) of track, serving 36
stations.
FasTracks is a light
rail/bus/rail expansion project approved by voters in 2004 which
will serve neighboring suburbs and communities.
Amtrak, the national passenger rail system, provides
service to Denver, operating its California Zephyr daily in both directions
between Chicago
and Emeryville
, California
, across the bay from San
Francisco
. Amtrak Thruway service operated by private
bus companies links the Denver station with Rocky Mountain
points.
At Albuquerque, New Mexico, Denver Thruway connections are made
daily with the Amtrak
Southwest
Chief.
Additionally, the Ski
Train operated on the former Denver & Rio Grande
Western Railroad, which took passengers between Denver and the
Winter
Park
Ski Resort, but it is no longer in
service.
Denver's early years as a major train hub of the west are still
very visible today.
Trains stop in Denver at historic Union
Station
, where travelers can access RTD's 16th Street
Free MallRide or use light rail to tour the city.
Union
Station
will also serve as the main juncture for rail
travel in the metro area, at the completion of FasTracks.
Airports
Denver
International Airport
(IATA: DEN, ICAO: KDEN), commonly known as DIA,
serves as the primary airport for a large region surrounding
Denver. DIA is located east-northeast of the
Colorado
State Capitol
. DIA is the tenth busiest airport in the
world and ranks fourth in the United States, with 51,245,334
passengers passing through it in 2008.
It covers more than
53 square miles (137 km²), making it the largest airport by
land area in the United States and larger than the island of
Manhattan
. Denver serves as a major hub for
United Airlines and the headquarters for
Frontier Airlines.

Outside view of the main terminal,
DIA
Three
general aviation airports
serve the Denver area.
Rocky
Mountain Metropolitan Airport
(KBJC) is north-northwest, Centennial
Airport
(KAPA) is south-southeast, and Front Range
Airport
(KFTG) is located east of the state
capitol.
In the past, Denver has been home to several other airports that
are no longer operational.
Stapleton International
Airport
was closed in 1995 when it was replaced by
DIA. Lowry Air Force Base
was a military flight training facility that ceased
flight operations in 1966, with the base finally being closed in
1994. It is currently being used for residential purposes.
Buckley Air
Force Base
, a former Air
National Guard base is currently the only military facility in
the Denver-Metro area.
Education
The Ritchie Center at University of Denver
Denver Public Schools (DPS) is
the public school system in Denver. It currently educates about
73,000 students in 73
elementary
schools, 15 K-8 schools, 17
middle
schools, 14
high schools, and 19
charter schools. The first school of
what is now DPS was a log cabin that opened in 1859 on the corner
of 12th Street between Market and Larimer Streets. The district
boundaries are coëxtensive with the city limits.
Denver's many colleges and universities range in age and study
programs. The city has
Roman
Catholic and
Jewish institutions, as
well as a health sciences school. In addition to those schools
within the city, there are a number of schools located throughout
the surrounding metro area.
The private University of Denver
and Johnson & Wales
University, Catholic (Jesuit) Regis University and the three public
schools that constitute the Auraria
Campus, University of
Colorado Denver, Metropolitan State College
of Denver, and Community
College of Denver, are likely the best known higher education
institutions located in the city itself.
Culture and contemporary life
Apollo Hall opened quickly after the city's founding in 1859 and
staged many plays for eager settlers. In the 1880s
Horace Tabor built Denver's first
Opera House.
After the turn of the century, city leaders
embarked on a city beautification program that created many of the
city's parks, parkways, museums, and the Municipal Auditorium,
which was home to the 1908 Democratic National
Convention and is now known as the Ellie
Caulkins Opera House
. Denver and the metropolitan areas around it
continued to support culture. In 1988, voters in the
Denver-Aurora Metropolitan
Area approved the Scientific and Cultural Facilities Tax
(commonly known as SCFD), a .01
sales tax
that contributes money to various cultural and scientific
facilities and organizations throughout the Metro area. The tax was
renewed by voters in 1994 and 2004 and allows the SCFD to operate
until 2018.
Denver is
home to many nationally recognized museums, including a new wing
for the Denver Art
Museum
by world-renowned architect Daniel Libeskind, the second largest
Performing arts center
in the nation after Lincoln Center
in New York
City
and bustling neighborhoods such as LoDo, filled with art galleries, restaurants, bars and
clubs. That is part of the reason why Denver was recently
recognized for the third year in a row as the best city for
singles. Denver's neighborhoods also continue their influx of
diverse people and businesses while the city's cultural
institutions grow and prosper. The city acquired the estate of
abstract expressionist
painter
Clyfford Still in 2004 and
plans to build a museum to exhibit his works near the Denver Art
Museum by 2010.Denver also has a museum of nature and science
[943] where
currently there is an amazing aquamarine specimen valued at over
one million dollars and the state mineral of rhodochrosite can be
found there as well. Every September there is a mineral show put on
at the Convention center
[944] at
451 E. 58th Avenue.
While Denver may not be as recognized for historical musical
prominence as some other American cities, it still manages to have
a very active
pop,
jazz,
jam,
folk, and
classical music scene, which has
nurtured several artists and genres to regional, national, and even
international attention. Of particular note is Denver's importance
in the
folk scene of the 1960s and 1970s.
Well-known folk artists such as
Bob Dylan,
Judy Collins and
John Denver lived in Denver at various points
during this time, and performed at local clubs. More recent
Denver-based artists include
The Fray,
The Flobots, and
Cephalic Carnage.
Because of its proximity to the mountains, and generally sunny
weather, Denver has gained a reputation as being a very active,
outdoor oriented city. Many Denver residents spend the weekends in
the mountains; either skiing in the winter or hiking, climbing,
kayaking and camping in the summer.

Sakura Square in downtown Denver
Additionally, Denver and the surrounding cities of the Front Range
are home to a large number of local and national breweries.
Many
restaurants in the region have on-site breweries, and some of the
larger brewers, including Coors and the
New Belgium
Brewing Company
, offer tours. Overall, Denver ranks 1st in
the nation in terms of beer production per capita, and second
overall in terms of number of breweries. The city also welcomes
visitors from around the world when it hosts the annual
Great American Beer Festival
each fall.
Denver used to be a major trading center for beef and livestock
when ranchers would drive (or later transport) cattle to the Denver
Union Stockyards for sale. As a celebration of that history, each
year for more than a century, Denver hosts the
National Western Stock Show, the
largest event of its kind among agricultural and western American
lifestyle events in the world , attracting as many as 10,000
animals and 700,000 attendees. The National Western Stock Show is
held every January at the National Western Complex, northeast of
downtown.
Denver hosts two of the largest Hispanic celebrations in the nation
:
Cinco de Mayo, in May, and
El Grito de la Independencia, in
September.
The
Dragon Boat Festival in
July,
Moon Festival in September and
Chinese New Year are annual events
in Denver for the Chinese and Asian residents. Chinese hot pot (huo
guo) and
Korean BBQ restaurants have
been growing in popularity. The Denver area has 2 Chinese
newspapers, the Chinese American Post and the Colorado Chinese
News.
Denver is also the setting for the
The Bill Engvall Show, and the
setting for
the 18th season
of
MTV's
The Real
World. It was also the setting for the prime time drama
Dynasty from 1981 to
1989 (although the show was mostly filmed in Los Angeles).
From 1998
to 2002, the city's Alameda East Veterinary
Hospital
was home to the Animal
Planet series Emergency
Vets, which spun off three one-off documentary specials
and the current Animal Planet series E-Vet Interns.
Sports
Denver is home to a variety of sports teams and belongs to a select
group of
U.S. cities with
teams from four major sports. Denver is also one of only 3
cities in the nation that has a team representing all 8 of the
major sports leagues in the US, joining Chicago and New York.
Denver submitted the winning bid to host the
1976 Winter Olympics, but subsequently
withdrew giving it the dubious distinction of being the only city
to back out after winning a bid to host the Olympics.
The Denver Broncos of the NFL have been able to draw crowds
of nearly 70,000 since their AFL origins in the early 1960s and
continue to draw fans today to their current home Invesco
Field at Mile High
. The team has advanced to the
Super Bowl six times and won back-to-back in 1998
and '99.
In the 1980s and 1990s, one of the top
priorities of former Mayor Federico
Peña was bringing major league baseball to the city, an effort
which culminated in the creation of the Colorado Rockies as an expansion franchise
in 1993 and the opening of Coors Field
in 1995. The Rockies advanced to the
playoffs in 1995, but were eliminated in the first round. In 2007,
their late-season winning streak saw them advance to the playoffs
as a wild-card entrant, advance to and win the NL Championship
Series and bring the
World Series to
Denver for the first time.
Denver is also home to the Colorado Avalanche, a National Hockey League team that
relocated from Quebec
City
in 1995. They have won two Stanley Cups (1996 and 2001) while in Denver and
play at Pepsi
Center
, which also hosts the Denver Nuggets of the National Basketball
Association, the Colorado
Mammoth of the National
Lacrosse League and the Colorado
Crush of the Arena Football
League. The Major
League Soccer team Colorado
Rapids play in Dick's Sporting Goods Park
, an 18,000 seat stadium opened for the 2007 MLS
season is located in Commerce City
, a suburb of Denver. In 2006 Denver
established a professional outdoor lacrosse team, the
Denver Outlaws.
They play in Invesco Field
and are sanctioned by Major League Lacrosse. In 2006,
The Denver Outlaws won the Western Conference Championship.
Current sporting venues in Denver,
Colorado
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Adjacent counties and municipalities
|
North: Adams
County , Commerce City |
|
West: Jefferson
County , Wheat Ridge , Lakeside , Mountain View , Edgewater , Lakewood , Arvada |
Denver
Enclave: Arapahoe
County , Glendale |
Adams
County
East: Aurora
Arapahoe County |
|
South: Arapahoe
County , Bow Mar , Littleton , Sheridan , Englewood , Cherry Hills Village , Greenwood Village , Aurora , Highlands Ranch |
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See also
Notes
External links