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The Steamboat Springs Downtown Historic District is a historic district covering about six blocks which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2014. [ 2 ] The district consists of "mainly one to two story brick and wood commercial buildings with a sampling of buildings three stories or more.
Steamboat Springs is a home rule municipality that is the county seat and the most populous municipality of Routt County, Colorado, United States. [8] The population was 13,224 at the 2020 census. [9] Steamboat Springs is the principal city of the Steamboat Springs Micropolitan Statistical Area, and it is the largest city in northwestern Colorado.
The town was accepted into the program in 2001. [19] Non-participating Communities. East Hartford, Town Council authorized application to Connecticut Main Street Program in 1995. [20] Selected in 1995. [21] Meriden, Bob Cooper was Meriden's downtown manager in 1996. [22] New London, Selected in 1995. [23]
The Crawford House was the primary residence of James Harvey Crawford, the "Father of Steamboat Springs", and his wife, Margaret Emerine (Bourn) Crawford, the "Mother of Routt County." James first saw the Yampa River in the Spring of 1874. He staked his 160-acre homestead claim centered around the Steamboat Spring.
— Despite offering a salary of $167,000, the city of Steamboat Springs can’t find a head of human resources who can afford a place to live in the remote Colorado community surrounded by ...
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The Chamber of Commerce Building in Steamboat Springs, Colorado, at 1201 Lincoln Ave., is a Modern Movement-style building that was designed by architect Eugene D. Sternberg and was built in 1960. Its 2009 application for NRHP listing describes it as "an unusual application of the Usonian housing style to a commercial building.
It was built in the year after railroad service to Steamboat Springs began. Service ran until 1968. [2] It was a depot of the Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad. [2] By 1977, it had been converted into a theater building. [2] It is located by the Yampa River in Steamboat Springs. [2]