The City and County of Denver has a formal historic designation program that establishes Denver landmarks. These are designated by ordinances of Denver's city council.[1] The first three sites so designated, on January 10, 1968, are the Emmanuel/Sherith Chapel, Constitution Hall (site) (destroyed by fire in 1977), and the Governor's Mansion. The list includes a sublist of historic districts. Boundaries of historic districts appear in Landmark_Map_Sep2019
Check:[2]
Denver has many visitor attractions and landmarks, including:
Official ones:
Unofficial and official and other ones:
The designated historic districts are:[3]
The publication Individual Landmarks in the City and County of Denver lists these individual landmarks:[4]
Fields are: LM# landmark name (ordinance) / common name (if different from ordinance) / address in ordinance / current address (if different from ordinance) / ordinance number / year of designation / estimated year of construction / historic district name (if applicable)
39°44′21″N 104°59′06″W / 39.7392°N 104.9850°W