Steamboat_Springs_Downtown_Historic_District

Steamboat Springs Downtown Historic District

Steamboat Springs Downtown Historic District

United States historic place


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]

Quick Facts Location, Coordinates ...

The district consists of "mainly one to two story brick and wood commercial buildings with a sampling of buildings three stories or more. The commercial buildings are built lot line to lot line with no front or side setbacks along Lincoln Avenue except for the Routt County Courthouse which is set back from Lincoln Avenue with an expansive lawn and the two gas stations that have the pump stations sited at the front of the lot with stores to the rear. The rectangular flat roof buildings typically display storefronts, recessed entryways, second-story narrow windows and parapets (both decorative and non-decorative). The styles featured in the district consist generally of the late 19th and early 20th Century Commercial, Classical Revivals and Modern Movement."[2]

It included 35 contributing buildings and a contributing object (Highway 40 (South Lincoln Avenue) through the area), as well as 16 noncontributing buildings. Three resources were already separately listed on the National Register. It is a 19 acres (7.7 ha) area centered on Lincoln Avenue (U.S. Highway 40).[3][4]

According to History Colorado, "approximately forty percent of buildings within the district were constructed during the decade of the train's arrival in anticipation of growth (1900-1909) or in the decade immediately following (1910-1920)."[3]

Selected buildings in the district are:

  • First National Bank Building, 803 Lincoln Avenue, already NRHP-listed
  • Routt County Bank Building (1923, Annex 1985), 802 Lincoln Avenue, Renaissance Revival style with Beaux-Arts influences, already NRHP-listed
  • Maxwell Squire Building, 842 Lincoln Avenue, already NRHP-listed
  • Mountain State Telephone and Telegraph Building, 704 Lincoln Avenue

[2]


References

  1. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. November 2, 2013.
  2. Martin, Bryce (December 9, 2019). "A stroll through history: Find your way around downtown Steamboat district". www.steamboatpilot.com. Retrieved October 20, 2022.



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