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Licensed to Loveland, Colorado, United States, it serves Northern Colorado including Fort Collins-Greeley and the Denver-Boulder metropolitan area. Programming is simulcast on 101.7 KXCL in Rock Creek Park, Colorado , which serves Colorado Springs , and on 75- watt translator station 101.7 K299AO in Sterling, Colorado .
Published in January 2014, the ICS recommended initial high-speed rail service between Fort Collins, Denver International Airport, and Briargate—a neighborhood of northern Colorado Springs—with future expansion to Pueblo. This alignment would bypass Boulder and downtown Denver via a new rail line built along the Colorado 470 beltway. The ...
KCSF (1300 AM, "Xtra Sports 1300") is a radio station serving the Colorado Springs area with a sports format. It is under ownership of Cumulus Media. The station features Infinity Sports Network, as well as Dan Patrick from Fox Sports Radio, Denver Nuggets, Colorado Avalanche, and Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC.
Two additional Outrider services began roughly at the same time. The first was between Durango and Grand Junction, and the second was between Denver and Gunnison. [11] In December 2018, an additional route between Colorado Springs and the Denver Tech Center was started. [12] Total ridership from July 2017 to June 2018 reached 194,064. [13]
KCRN (1120 kHz) is an AM radio station licensed to Limon, Colorado, and serving East Central Colorado. The station is owned by Catholic Radio Network, Inc. It airs a catholic radio format, mostly carrying talk and teaching programs from the EWTN Radio Network. Programming is simulcast on KRCN in Longmont, Colorado, serving the Denver ...
Rocky Mountain PBS is a network of PBS member television stations serving the U.S. state of Colorado.Headquartered in Denver, it is operated by Rocky Mountain Public Media, Inc., a non-profit organization which holds the licenses for most of the PBS member stations licensed in the state, with the exception of KBDI-TV (channel 12) in Broomfield, which serves as the Denver market's secondary (or ...
1925 — KFXF licensed as a new station on September 2 to the Pikes Peak Broadcasting Co., located at 226 Hangerman Building in Colorado Springs. [3] Call sign was randomly assigned from an alphabetical roster of available call letters. William Duncan Pyle was the principal owner. 1927 — Station moved from Colorado Springs to Denver. [4]
Colorado Public Radio (CPR) is a public radio state network based in Denver, Colorado that broadcasts three services: news, classical music and Indie 102.3, which plays adult album alternative music. CPR airs its programming on 15 full-power stations, augmented by 17 translators. Their combined signal reaches 80 percent of Colorado. [1]