Union Station, Denver

Summary

Union Station is a downtown neighborhood of Denver, Colorado. In 2020, the population of the neighborhood was roughly 5,878.[1]

The Icehouse, a Union Station building listed on the National Register of Historic Places

The neighborhood is named for Union Station, Denver's main railroad terminal. Much of the Lower Downtown Historic District (known as LoDo) is in the Union Station neighborhood, but the boundaries of the two are not the same, and LoDo is not one of the city's official statistical neighborhoods.

Boundaries edit

  • Northwest: South Platte River
  • Northeast: 20th Street
  • Southeast: Lawrence Street
  • Southwest: 14th Street (chiefly)

Redevelopment edit

Union Station and 19.5 acres (79,000 m2) of land surrounding it in the Union Station neighborhood were slated for re-development starting in 2002. As of 2019, that process has nearly been completed with the addition of a large number of apartments, a 334 unit condo complex, two grocery stores, and the now completed station.[2][3]

Landmarks edit

The 16th Street Mall ends in the Union Station neighborhood. It then continues in a northwesterly direction towards the Highland neighborhood as a pedestrian route. This route includes three pedestrian bridges: Highland Bridge, Denver Millennium Bridge, and the Platte River Bridge.

The neighborhood is anchored by Union Station.

References edit

  1. ^ "Union Station | Community Facts".
  2. ^ "Union Station Neighborhood / Denver, CO". unionstationdenver.com. Retrieved 2024-02-17.
  3. ^ "All Aboard: It's Time to Name the Area Behind Union Station!".

External links edit

  • Denver Union Station Master Plan and Process
  • Denver Union Station
  • River North Art District

39°45′25″N 104°59′50″W / 39.75708°N 104.99712°W / 39.75708; -104.99712