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The Denver Trolley operates a 1986 replica of a 1903 Brill open streetcar. The frame and steel components of the car used in the construction are from a 1924 Melbourne , Australia streetcar . Numbered 1977, the car was made by the Gomaco Trolley Company in Ida Grove, Iowa. [ 2 ]
The properties are distributed across 48 of Denver's 79 official neighborhoods.For the purposes of this list, the city is split into four regions: West Denver, which includes all of the city west of the South Platte River; Downtown Denver, which includes the neighborhoods of Capitol Hill, Central Business District, Civic Center, Five Points, North Capitol Hill, and Union Station; and Northeast ...
There are 314 properties and districts listed on the National Register in Denver, including 1 National Historic Landmark. Downtown Denver includes 151 of these properties and districts, including the National Historic Landmark and 2 that extend into other regions; the city's remaining properties and districts are listed elsewhere. Another 7 ...
214 Denver Dry Goods Building, 700 16th Street 700–714 16th Street, 1545–1585 California Street, 703–749 15th Street 57 1994 1888–1889, additions 1898, 1907, 1994 Downtown Denver 215 Bluebird Theater 3315–3317 E. Colfax Avenue 250 1994 1914 216 Denver Tramway Company Building, 1100 14th Street 329 1994 c. 1910 Downtown Denver
The building was designed by Denver architect Frank E. Edbrooke and renovated in 1902, 1927, and 1964. The company rebranded as Joslins following the 1964 remodel, which also significantly altered the building's exterior. [3] It was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1997. [1]
The flagship store of The Denver Dry Goods Company, the retailer was part of Associated Dry Goods, and under ADG the downtown Denver store was renovated. Many Colorado residents fondly recall the stores' motto, "Where Colorado Shops With Confidence." The store was acquired by May Company as part of Associated Dry Goods Corp. in 1986.
The First National Bank of Denver operated from 1865 to 1958. [2] John Evans, the son of William Gray Evans and the grandson of Territorial Governor John Evans, was the president beginning in 1928. [5] In 1958, Evans merged the First National Bank of Denver with the International Trust Company that was also under his leadership. [6]
The 22-story, 231-room tower directly across Tremont Place was built as a new wing of the hotel in 1959, known as the Brown Palace West. [10] For many years it operated as a budget wing of the hotel, until the Brown Palace's owners branded the guest rooms in the annex as a Comfort Inn in 1988, and then as a Holiday Inn Express in December 2014. [11]