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City Park West

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Opportunities for outdoor recreation, cultural enrichment,
gainful employment, or just hanging out at a favorite
corner pub or coffee house abound in City Park West,
one of Denver's more diverse neighborhoods, where an
eclectic mix of young and old, blue collar types, professionals,
students and teachers, singles and families, and myriad
ethnicities intermingle to the betterment of all.
Perhaps nothing defines this fascinating melting pot
community more than the Annual City Park Festival of
the Arts held in May at the historic Pavilion on Ferril
Lake. Said by locals to express the "art and soul" of
the neighborhood, the festival draws more than 150 artists
and craftspeople in an "incredible display of talent
and locally produced fine art and crafts, at once-a-year
prices."


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Two stages offer a thrilling non-stop spectacular
of music (from Rock to Salsa, Hip Hop to Swing),
dance, martial arts, poetry slams, and performance
art. Exhibitors at the most recent festival included
several galleries from the Santa Fe Arts District.
Settlement of City Park West began early, spurred
by the inauguration (in 1874) of streetcar service
on diagonally oriented Park Avenue. Other lines
soon followed between 13th and 34th Avenues, further
accelerating development. Tourists often camped
and square danced in City Park before it was closed
to overnight visitors after the onset of the Great
Depression.
City Park, at 317 acres, the largest of Denver's
parks, underwent numerous improvements during the
halcyon days of Mayor Speer's City Beautiful program.
Ferril Lake was dredged and graced with an illuminated
fountain, a buggy-racing track platted, the Neoclassical
Museum of Natural History built, and numerous cottonwoods
planted by schoolchildren. By 1904, the Denver
Zoo had been established. |
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In addition to classic bungalows,
Denver Squares, and contemporary condos and townhomes,
City Park West boasts a treasure trove of historic
homes dating from the heady Silver Boom days (1880
to 1893). Notables include the handsome Richardsonian
Romanesque Castle Marne Bed and Breakfast, fashioned
from rusticated rhyolite trimmed with limestone,
and the three-story Beaux-Arts mansion (the Smith
House), at the Corner of 18th Avenue and York Street.
Close by, the Denver Museum of Miniatures, Dolls,
and Toys occupies a charming Dutch Colonial home
done in brick with a full-length front porch supported
by paired columns.
City Park West offers an abundance of employment
opportunities within a five-minute radius by car
and within easy walking distance for those who
prefer to live New York style and leave their vehicles
at home.
The complex of hospitals near 18th and Franklin:
Saint Joseph's, Children's Hospital, Presbyterian-Saint
Luke's, Kaiser Permanente, along with nearby medical
suppliers, doctor's offices, and alternative-health-care
facilities, employ nearly 10,000 workers. A few
blocks farther west is Denver's central business
district, municipal and state office buildings,
and the cultural center anchored by the Central
Library, Denver Art Museum, and Colorado Historical
Museum. |
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"City Park West has the look and feel of a traditional
family neighborhood," says one long-time resident. "Neighbors
really get to know one another on walks and while
visiting from their front porches. Meanwhile, you're
close to downtown and great shopping at Cherry Creek.
The classic older homes lend a certain grandeur to
the community, while the genuine period craftsmanship
is a wonder to behold." |

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