èƵ

Skip to main content

Main navigation

  • èƵ Prize
    • Kongjian Yu
      LEARN: About Kongjian Yu
      • Learn About Kongjian Yu, the 2023 èƵ Prize Laureate
      • Hear From Kongjian Yu, the 2023 èƵ Prize Laureate
      • Read the èƵ Prize Jury Citation
      • Discover Three Landscapes Designed by Kongjian Yu
    • The Cornelia Hahn èƵ International Architecture Prize
      EXPLORE: The Cornelia Hahn èƵ International Landscape Architecture Prize
      • Past èƵ Prize Laureates
      • The èƵ Prize Jury
      • Nominee Qualifications, Jury Process and Governance
      • Nominate a Candidate
      • èƵ Prize Curator
    • Support the èƵ Prize
      GET INVOLVED: Support the èƵ Prize
      • View Prize Supporters
      • The 100 Women Campaign
      • Support the èƵ Prize
      • Paul Goldberger on the Importance of the Prize
      • Why Create the èƵ Prize?
      • Establishing the èƵ Prize
      • The èƵ Prize Advisory Committee

    Chinese Landscape Architect Kongjian Yu, Champion of “Sponge Cities” Concept for Addressing Climate Change Accelerated Urban Flooding, Wins 2023 Cornelia Hahn èƵ International Landscape Architecture Prize

  • Places
    • What Are Cultural Landscapes?
      LEARN: What Are Cultural Landscapes?
      • Designed Landscapes
      • Ethnographic Landscapes
      • Historic Sites
      • Vernacular Landscapes
    • The What's Out There Database
      EXPLORE: The What's Out There Database
      • Search the Database
      • Glossary of Types and Styles
      • The Alan Ward Portfolios of Designed Landscapes
      • Harriet Island Regional Park
      • Jamestown Island
      • Longfellow House - Washington's Headquarters National Historic Site
      • Plaquemine Point
    • City and Regional Guides
      VIEW: Cultural Landscape Guides
      • National Park Service Guides
      • African American Cultural Landscapes
      • Chicago
      • Cleveland
      • Denver
      • Houston
      • Indianapolis
      • Nashville
      • New Orleans
      • Olmsted Legacy
      • Raleigh-Durham
      • Rhinebeck & the Mid-Hudson Valley
      • San Antonio
      • San Diego
      • San Francisco Bay Area
      • St. Louis and the Missouri River Valley
      • Toronto
      • Twin Cities
      • Washington, D.C.

    Manitoga

    Red Rocks Park

  • People
    • About the Pioneers of Landscape Design
      LEARN: About the Pioneers of Landscape Design
      • Takeshi "Ken" Nakajima
      • Eliza Ridgely
      • Research Queries
      • See All Pioneers
    • Pioneers Oral Histories
      VIEW: Pioneers Oral Histories
      • Robert Royston Oral History
      • Harriet Pattison Oral History
      • See All Pioneers Oral Histories
    • Stewardship Stories
      READ: Stewardship Stories
      • It Takes One: Robert Louis Brandon Edwards
      • See All Stewardship Stories
      • Stewardship Excellence Awards

    Kate Olivia Sessions

  • Stewardship
    • About the Landslide Program
      LEARN: About the Landslide Program
      • At-Risk Landscapes
      • Saved Landscapes
      • Lost Landscapes
    • Annual Landslides
      EXPLORE: Annual Landslides
      • Landslide 2024: Demonstration Grounds
      • Landslide 2023: 25 Years / 25 Saved
      • See All Annual Landslides
    • Nominate a Landslide
      GET INVOLVED: Nominate a Landslide
      • Carter’s Grove Plantation
      • Druid Heights
      • Giant Sequoia Range
    Apostle Islands National Lakeshore, Bayfield, WI

    Apostle Islands National Lakeshore

  • Events
    • Learn
      LEARN
      • Conferences
      • Lectures
      • Exhibitions
      • Fellowships
      • èƵ Prize Forums
      • Race & Space Conversations
    • explore
      EXPLORE
      • What’s Out There Weekends
      • Garden Dialogues
      • Walks & Talks
      • Annual Fall ASLA Excursion
      • International Spring Excursion
    • Participate
      PARTICIPATE
      • Annual Silent Auction
      • Receptions & Book Events
      • Sponsorship Opportunities

    Soak It Up: Combating Climate Change with Landscape Architecture - Live Event

  • Shop
  • Support

Site Menu

  • About
Home
TCLF logo
Home
Denver
About
Places
People
African American
Baltimore (NPS)
Boston (NPS)
Chicago
Cleveland
D.C. Modernism (NPS)
Denver
Houston
Indianapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City (NPS)
Olmsted
Philadelphia (NPS)
Raleigh-Durham
Rhinebeck & the Mid-Hudson Valley
Richmond (NPS)
San Antonio
San Diego
San Francisco
St. Louis and the Missouri River Valley
Toronto
Twin Cities
Washington, D.C.

About Denver

Image
Bird's Eye View of Denver, 1887
Bird's Eye View of Denver, 1887 -

 

Parks have been important to Denver’s identity since its earliest days. The first – Mestizo Curtis Park (originally known as Curtis Park) – was created a decade after the city’s founding as the mining town of Denver City in 1858.  Today, in this most populous city in the Mountain West (and the most populous within a 500-mile radius), mapped parkland represents 8.2% of the city. 

The What’s Out There Denver guide, which spans more than 150 years of design excellence, reveals the most significant public parks and open spaces within this region. Here, in this semi-arid climate rich in natural, scenic, ecological, historic and cultural values, and an unrivaled 200-mile backdrop of snow-capped mountains, the public parks alone total more than 6,100 acres. They range in size from Colorow Point Park at less than one-half an acre to City Park (the city’s most visited park) at 314 acres. And, if all of this is not extraordinary enough, Rocky Mountain National Park, which covers 416 square miles, is just seventy miles away.

Image
City Park, Denver, CO in 1901
City Park, Denver, CO in 1901 -

This Guide—the first in our series of Web-based, city-focused guides— covers a broad range of landscape types including parks, parkways, boulevards, and park systems, along with cemeteries and burial grounds, botanical gardens, suburbs, golf courses, campus and institutional landscapes, civic centers and plazas, even transit and pedestrian malls. Their styles can be classified as Picturesque or Romantic, Beaux-Arts or Neoclassical, but also include Modernist and Postmodernist examples.

The Denver parks and open space network is an unrivaled local design interpretation that leverages the unique geography of the surrounding Rocky Mountain range and expansive American Prairie grasslands and inherent visual and spatial relationships.  This system, with great designs by pioneering landscape architects (e.g. Olmsted Brothers, George Kessler, S.R. DeBoer) working in concert with visionary civic leaders (John Evans, William McLellan, Richard Sopris), provides “comprehensive and coherent linkage between neighborhoods, between public activity centers and the citizens served, between the city and its environment, between business and residents, and, most importantly, between people.” And, none of this was accidental.

 

Image
Park and Boulevard System of Denver
Park and Boulevard System of Denver - Map by Edward Rollandet (ca. 1894)

 

Denver’s park system is unique among other great American cities for having two distinct visions that made this one-time “cow town” a model for city planning and design in the region. First, in 1894, a plan for a “Park and Boulevard System of Denver” established the foundational vision and planning framework that was woven through neighborhoods with destination neighborhood parks (large and small) and cultural destinations (libraries, schools) connected by ribbons of parkways. Here larger parks included a variety of landscape experiences such as lakes that not only served to store water but also reflected the surrounding mountainscapes and established community character. Berkeley Lake Park, Cheesman Park and Washington Park, and parkways such as Speer Boulevard and Williams Street Parkway are popular examples from this era. 

This late 19th century plan was expanded by Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. in 1912, with his “Mountain Park Preliminary Plan,” which identified more than 40,000 acres that could serve as Denver’s open space. This both stretched the existing system and offered the opportunity for the nation’s premiere landscape architects, Olmsted Brothers, to make a coherent system in the nearby mountains. Where traditional urban planning called for building height restrictions to preserve the views from the city, here the actual sites being viewed – such as the signature canyon walls, mountain peaks and prairie grasslands – were protected by being secured, and turned into parks – examples include Echo Lake Park and Lookout Mountain Park.

As Don and Carolyn Etter, the former co-Managers of Denver's Department of Parks and Recreation, have noted, “In the end, the city became a work of urban landscape art, a garden city if you will. And the subsequent mountain extension of the system was promptly recognized as a unique tourist attraction and a gateway to the Rocky Mountains.”

The city’s in-town and mountain parks continued to be realized until the beginning of the Second World War in 1941 and the opening of Red Rocks Amphitheatre, which served as the capstone on this period of enlightened design and stewardship. Then, as was the case in countless American cities, there was a period of diminished care and management in the 1950s and 1960s. An era of reclaiming cities ensued from the mid 1960s into the 1970s ushering in both bold urban renewal proposals as well as an ambitious historic preservation agenda.  This resulted in a new generation of public spaces from parks and plazas to campus and cultural institutions.

Image
Skyline Park
Skyline Park - Charles Birnbaum

 

Beginning in downtown Denver, both Modernist and Postmodernist projects helped reclaim the city with richly designed and unique public spaces including Lawrence Halprin and Sat Nishita’s first block of Skyline Park (1973) and the Sixteenth Street Mall by Hanna/Olin and I.M. Pei Associates (1982). Concurrent with this new type of urban redevelopment, the preservation movement took root in Denver with local landscape architect Jane Silverstein Ries’ involvement in the renewal of Larimer Square (Denver’s first historic district designation in 1971).  It came to full fruition in 1986 with the designation to the National Register of Historic Places of Denver’s extensive citywide network of fifteen parks and sixteen parkways (all within the city limits), followed by the Denver Mountain Parks in 1990 (the scope of the designation was expanded in 1995). In 2012, Civic Center joined an even more elite group of sites when it was designated a National Historic Landmark, for its “holistic ensemble of built and landscape elements, significant in the areas of architecture, planning, art and landscape design.”

We hope the What’s Out There Denver guide is enjoyable and informative as you explore the city’s rich and enviable legacy of parks, parkways and open spaces, which collectively reveal its fascinating evolution.  With its unrivaled setting, panoramic views and breadth of design innovation and excellence, the experience of being in these public places should prove uplifting.

Image
Sunrise Amphitheater, Boulder, CO
Sunrise Amphitheater, Boulder, CO - Barrett Doherty

 

In This Section

  • Denver's Landscape Legacy
  • Associations (Designations)
  • City and Regional Guides
Sponsors
Learn more about our sponsorship opportunities

Stay Connected

© 2001-2025 èƵ, all rights reserved. The marks "èƵ", "connecting people to places", "Landslide", "Pioneers of American Landscape Design", "What's Out There", and the “Cornelia Hahn èƵ International Landscape Architecture Prize” are registered trademarks of èƵ®