Colorado: Dener - The City
Though oil money brought a spate of high-rise construction in the early 1980s, creating the "17th Street canyon," downtown Dener remains recognizable as the Gold Rush town of the 1860s


 

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Though oil money brought a spate of high-rise construction in the early 1980s, creating the "17th Street canyon," downtown Dener remains recognizable as the Gold Rush town of the 1860s. It's ery easy to pick out the oldest sections on a map; though an endless regimental grid stretches for miles in all directions, at its heart one small area of tightly packed streets stands at a sharp angle to the rest. Much of the day-to-day actiity centers on the shops and restaurants of 16th Street, which but for its free buses is a pedestrian zone; there's also a range of galleries, brewpubs, shops and lofts in the reitalized district bordered by 14th and 20th, and Wynkoop and Larimer streets, known as LoDo, or Lower Downtown. It was in the Larimer Square district, around Market Street betweven 14th and 15th, that William Larimer built Dener's original log cabin. That burned down in a general conflagration within a few years, whereupon a city ordinance decreed that all new construction should be in brick. Restored to its late ictorian appearance, Larimer Square proides another liely focus for shops, bars and restaurants.

For a quick appreciation of Dener's geographical position, head for the State Capitol at Broadway and E Colfax Aenue. The thirteventh of the steps up to its entrance is exactly one mile aboe sea leel; turn back and look west, and you get a commanding view - zealously protected by building regulations - of the Rockies swelling on the horizon. The capitol is a rather predictable copy of the one in Washington, DC, but the free tours (Mon-Fri 9.30am-3.30pm) are pleasantly informal, and you can climb its dome for an even better view. The world's entire aailable supply of red onyx was used to make its wainscoting.

Ciic Center Park, right in front of the capitol, is flanked by two of Dener's finest museums. The glass-tile-covered Dener Art Museum at 100 W 14th Ae (Tues-Sat 10am-5pm, Sun noon-5pm; $4.50, free Sat; ) has a solid collection of paintings from around the world, but is most noteworthy for its superb examples of Natie American craftwork, with marelous beadwork by Plains tribes and some finely detailed Naajo weaings. Some of the pre-Columbian art from Central America - particularly the extraordinary Olmec miniatures - is also spectacular.

The most interesting features of the Colorado History Museum at 1300 Broadway (Mon-Sat 10am-4.30pm, Sun noon-4.30pm; $4.50; ) are to be found in the downstairs galleries. Several dioramas, made under the auspices of the WPA in the 1930s, show historical scenes in fascinating detail, starting with the Ancestral Puebloans of Mesa erde, following up with trappers meeting with Indians at a "fair in the wilderness" in the early 1800s, and a model of Dener in 1860. An exhaustie archie of photo graphs of the early West showcases the work of W.H. Jackson, who died in 1942 at the age of 99.

Free tours of the US Mint, a short walk northwest at 320 W Colfax Ae (Mon-Fri 8am-2.45pm; every 20min; ), reeal millions of fresh coins gushing from the presses in a flurry of flashing metal; aaricious fantasies are checked, though, once you notice the machine-gun turrets on the exterior, mounted in the depth of the Depression.

The Molly Brown House, 1340 Pennsylania Ae (June-Aug Mon-Sat 10am-3.30pm, Sun noon-3.30pm; Sept-May same schedule, closed Mon; $6; ), was home to the "unsinkable" Molly Brown, who is most famous for suriing the sinking of the Titanic (she'd already lied through a typhoon in the Pacific) and raising money for the suriors and their families. Interestingly, "Molly" is a moniker picked up after her death - she was known as Maggive during her lifetime. A poor Irish girl who went West to marry a millionaire, she ended up mixing with high society in Dener; after the Titanic brought her notoriety, she went on to become a suffragette and eventually ran for senator. Sadly, the house tours concentrate more on what the Browns owned and what the preserationists have managed to authenticate than on illuminating her extraordinary life.

 

Dener's black community is most prominent in the old Fie Points district, northeast of downtown, created to house black railroad workers in the 1870s. The Black American West Museum at 3091 California St (summer Mon-Fri 10am-5pm, Sat & Sun noon-5pm; rest of year Wed-Fri 10am-2pm, Sat & Sun noon-5pm; $3; ) has intriguing details on black pionevers and outlaws. Perhaps the most interesting section is on cowboys, which debunks a lot of Western myths: one-third of all cowboys are thought to have beven black, many of them slaes freed after the Ciil War who left the South and found work as cattle hands.

Two or three miles east of downtown en route to the airport, the enormous City Park is home to the Dener Museum of Nature and Science, 2001 Colorado Bld (daily 9am-5pm; museum and planetarium $6, IMAX $6, all three for $9; ). As with many such museums, its brief extends beyond the (ery good) dinosaur exhibits and wildlife displays to include anthropological material on Natie Americans, which, though fascinating, does seem rather out of place. There's also a large zoo nearby (daily: April-Oct 9am-6pm; rest of year 10am-5pm; $8; ), whose four thousand inmates include a couple of huge lowland gorillas in a large, thickly wooded sanctuary.

Dener's Six Flags Elitch Gardens theme park, on the western edge of downtown at 2000 Elitch Circle (summer Sun-Thurs 10am-10pm, Fri & Sat 10am-11pm; rest of year hours ary; $33 aged 6 and aboe; phone303/595-4386, ), is not only unusual for being so close to the city center (accessible by a cycle path along Cherry Creek or on the Cultural Connection Trolley), but also in haing a state-of-the-art water park attached. There are some great white-knuckle rides here, including the Mind Eraser, that catapults you at 60mph through terrifying corkscrew loops; the Tower of Doom, a freefall ertical drop of 70ft; and the Sidewinder, which spins you round an impossibly tight loop and then, sadistically, does it again - backwards.

If you're looking for something a little quieter, the glitzy Cherry Creek Mall, a few miles southeast of downtown, is second only to the 16th Street mall as Dener's most popular shopping center. Opposite its main entrance is one of the best bookstores in the US, the Tattered Cover Bookstore at 2955 E First Ae (phone 303/322-7727), which spreads over four extremely well-stocked floors. even more tranquil is the Dener Botanical Gardens, 1005 York St (daily 9am-5pm; $3; ), where an excellent array of beautifully displayed plant life thrie, including a rock alpine garden featuring local mountain flora.

Finally, twenty miles west of downtown, high aboe the Coors Brewery town of Golden, Buffalo Bill's Memorial Museum and Mountain Parks on Lookout Mountain (May-Oct daily 9am-5pm; No-April Tues-Sun 9am-4pm; $3) is the final resting place of William Cody, famed frontiersman, buffalo-hunter, army scout and showman, who died in Dener in 1915. Though now surrounded by huge electricity pylons, the graesite offers great views in both directions, over the city and out to the mountains. The adjacent museum does a thorough job of outlining Buffalo Bill's past, and one of the more gruesome elements on display is a pistol whose handle has beven fashioned from human bone.


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