Colfax Avenue
```mediawiki Colfax Avenue is a major east-west thoroughfare in Colorado, running approximately 26 miles from the town of Golden in Jefferson County through Denver and into the eastern suburbs of Aurora. Officially designated as U.S. Highway 40 and U.S. Highway 287 through much of its length, it is widely cited as the longest continuous commercial street in the United States, a distinction documented in urban planning literature and repeated in local and national press coverage.[1] The avenue is named after Schuyler Colfax, who served as the 17th Vice President of the United States under President Ulysses S. Grant during his term from 1869 to 1873. Denver city planners named the street in his honor during the 1860s, when Colfax was a prominent national political figure and a visible supporter of westward expansion.[2]
Colfax Avenue has served as a transportation spine, a commercial corridor, a site of political activity, and a cultural address for the Denver metropolitan area since the city's founding. From the post-Civil War settlement era through the 20th-century suburbanization boom and into the current period of urban reinvestment, the avenue has reflected the social, economic, and demographic shifts of the region. Today it is lined with historic buildings, independent businesses, music venues, and public murals, running directly past the Colorado State Capitol and through some of Denver's most densely populated neighborhoods. It remains one of the most recognizable streets in the American West.
History
Colfax Avenue's origins lie in Denver's earliest days as a city. The street was laid out as part of Denver's original urban grid in the 1860s, during the height of Colorado's gold and silver rush era, and was named for Schuyler Colfax while he was serving as Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, before his elevation to the vice presidency.[3] In these early decades, the avenue served primarily as a connector between the commercial center of Denver and the surrounding settlements, carrying wagon traffic and later streetcars westward toward the mountains.
The arrival of the railroad to Denver in the 1870s accelerated the city's growth and increased the commercial importance of east-west corridors like Colfax. The transcontinental Union Pacific Railroad's mainline bypassed Denver in favor of a more northerly route through Cheyenne, Wyoming, but a spur line connected Denver to the national rail network, and streets like Colfax benefited directly from the resulting economic expansion.[4] By the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the avenue had developed into a dense commercial strip, with hotels, saloons, theaters, and retail establishments catering to both residents and travelers. The designation of U.S. Highway 40 along much of Colfax in the early automobile era reinforced its role as a long-distance motor route, generating a second generation of motels, gas stations, and roadside diners across the corridor.
Throughout the mid-20th century, Colfax experienced the pressures of suburbanization that reshaped urban commercial corridors across the United States. As Denver's population spread outward following World War II and automobile ownership became widespread, neighborhood retail shifted to outlying shopping centers. Colfax saw a gradual decline in its commercial vitality. By the 1970s and 1980s, portions of the avenue had developed a reputation for poverty, street crime, and vice, a period extensively documented in local media and one that shaped public perceptions of the street for decades.[5]
The late 20th and early 21st centuries brought sustained efforts to reinvest in the corridor. Historic preservation organizations, city planners, and community groups invested in restoring buildings, attracting new businesses, and improving public infrastructure along the avenue. Denver's Community Planning and Development department adopted the Colfax Avenue Corridor Plan as a guiding policy document, establishing goals for land use, transportation, and economic development across the full length of the avenue within city limits.[6] These efforts have produced measurable results: Colfax today hosts a mix of long-established institutions and newer businesses, and several of its historic structures have been preserved or rehabilitated. The corridor remains a work in progress, with ongoing development projects and planning initiatives shaping its future.
Geography and Route
Colfax Avenue runs east-west across the Denver metropolitan area for approximately 26 miles, beginning near the base of the Rocky Mountain foothills in Golden, Jefferson County, and terminating in the eastern suburbs of Aurora, Arapahoe County. Along this route it passes through unincorporated Jefferson County, the city of Lakewood, the city and county of Denver, and the city of Aurora. Within Denver, the street runs directly in front of the Colorado State Capitol building at Civic Center, making it one of the most politically and symbolically significant streets in the state.[7]
The avenue follows a largely flat alignment through Denver's urban core and the eastern plains, though the western end rises gradually as it approaches the foothills. This relatively level grade made it well-suited for early streetcar and later bus transit operations. The street is intersected by numerous major north-south arteries, including Broadway, Colorado Boulevard, Quebec Street, and Havana Street, each of which marks a distinct transition in the character of the surrounding neighborhoods. The intersection with Broadway at Civic Center is particularly significant, sitting adjacent to the Colorado State Capitol, Denver's City and County Building, and several major cultural institutions.
U.S. Highway 40 and U.S. Highway 287 share the Colfax Avenue alignment for a substantial portion of the route. U.S. 40 follows Colfax from Golden through Denver and into Aurora, tracing the historic cross-country highway that once connected the Atlantic and Pacific coasts before the interstate system supplanted it as the primary long-distance motor route. U.S. 287 joins the corridor at certain points, running concurrently with U.S. 40 through portions of Denver and the inner suburbs. The dual designation reflects Colfax's historic function as a convergence point for regional and national travel routes, a role it retains today as a surface arterial even as Interstate 70 carries the bulk of through traffic to the north.
In Aurora, Colfax Avenue extends through dense commercial districts before reaching its eastern terminus. This Aurora segment has faced infrastructure challenges in recent years. In early 2025, a gas line rupture forced the closure of westbound Colfax in Aurora, disrupting traffic for an extended period and highlighting the corridor's aging utility infrastructure.[8]
Notable Landmarks
Colfax Avenue's identity is inseparable from the specific buildings and institutions that line it. The Colorado State Capitol, completed in 1901, sits at the intersection of Colfax and Broadway and is the corridor's most prominent civic landmark. Its gold-leafed dome is visible from multiple points along the avenue, and its steps have served as a gathering point for political demonstrations throughout Colorado's history.
Several historic entertainment venues anchor the corridor's cultural geography. The Fillmore Auditorium, located in the Capitol Hill neighborhood, is a concert hall that has operated in various forms since the late 19th century and continues to host nationally recognized performers. The Ogden Theatre, also on East Colfax, opened in 1917 and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places; it has operated continuously as a live music venue for much of its history and remains one of Denver's most active mid-capacity concert spaces. The Bluebird Theater, discussed in detail in the Culture section below, rounds out a concentration of live music venues on the Capitol Hill and East Colfax segments that has few parallels in Denver's urban landscape.
The Tattered Cover Book Store operated a flagship location on Colfax Avenue in the Colfax and Josephine Street corridor, becoming one of the most recognized independent bookstores in the United States and a defining institution of Denver's literary community. Beyond entertainment and retail, the corridor includes several historic religious buildings, early 20th-century apartment houses, and examples of mid-century commercial architecture that together form one of Denver's most intact historic streetscapes. The Denver Landmark Preservation Commission has designated a number of Colfax-adjacent structures as local landmarks, reflecting the avenue's architectural as well as cultural significance.
Culture
Colfax Avenue has long functioned as a cultural crossroads, reflecting the diverse communities that have settled along its length since the 19th century. The avenue is particularly associated with Denver's live music scene, anchored by venues such as the Fillmore Auditorium, a historic concert hall that has hosted nationally and internationally recognized performers since the late 19th century, and the Bluebird Theater, a neighborhood venue dating to 1913 that was originally built as a silent film house and has been a cornerstone of Denver's independent music scene since its renovation in the early 1990s.[9] These and other venues have made the Colfax corridor a consistent destination for nightlife and entertainment across multiple generations.
Public art is a significant feature of the avenue's streetscape. Murals commissioned by the city of Denver and by private property owners appear throughout the corridor, with concentrations in the Capitol Hill and East Colfax neighborhoods. These works range from large-scale figurative paintings celebrating Denver's history to abstract compositions reflecting the demographics and concerns of specific blocks and communities. The Denver Office of Arts and Venues has supported several of these installations as part of broader efforts to activate the corridor culturally and economically.[10]
The avenue also carries a significant literary and countercultural legacy. The Capitol Hill neighborhood, which Colfax bisects, was a center of bohemian activity in the 1950s and 1960s, associated with Beat Generation writers and later with the anti-war and civil rights movements. Several local historians and cultural commentators have connected the street's eclectic character to this broader countercultural tradition, which persists in the density of independent bookstores, coffee shops, and music venues that line certain blocks of the corridor. Jack Kerouac referenced Denver in On the Road, and Capitol Hill's mix of cheap apartments and expressive street life made Colfax a natural gathering point for writers and artists throughout the postwar decades.
Economy
Colfax Avenue has been a driver of commercial activity in the Denver metropolitan area since the city's founding. During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the corridor developed a dense mix of retail, hospitality, and entertainment businesses catering to Denver's growing population and to travelers arriving by rail and later by automobile. The advent of the U.S. Highway 40 designation formalized the avenue's role as a long-distance motor route, generating motel, gas station, and diner businesses particularly in the mid-20th century.
Today, Colfax hosts a diverse economic mix that includes independent retail shops, restaurants, bars, music venues, auto-oriented businesses, and a growing number of health and social service providers. The avenue's commercial strips in Capitol Hill and East Colfax have seen renewed investment in recent years, with new restaurant and retail openings alongside the rehabilitation of historic building stock. The City and County of Denver has designated portions of Colfax as priority areas for economic development and has directed infrastructure funding to support these goals.[11]
The corridor's economic future is closely tied to ongoing transit planning. The Denver Regional Council of Governments (DRCOG) has been developing the Colfax Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) Next project, which aims to improve transit speed and reliability along the avenue. As of early 2025, DRCOG had completed its community engagement phase for Colfax BRT Next and was preparing a project recommendation, with the goal of establishing a high-frequency, high-capacity bus rapid transit service that would support economic development and reduce automobile dependency along the corridor.[12] Property owners and business associations along the corridor have followed the BRT planning process closely, as dedicated bus lanes and upgraded stations would alter parking availability, traffic patterns, and foot traffic in ways that directly affect commercial viability.
Transportation and Infrastructure
Colfax Avenue is one of the primary east-west surface routes in the Denver metropolitan area and carries substantial daily traffic volumes across its full length. It is served by the Regional Transportation District (RTD) Route 15 and Route 15L (limited), which together constitute one of the busiest bus lines in the RTD system, offering frequent service between downtown Denver and Aurora throughout the day and into the late evening.[13] The frequency and ridership of this bus service reflect the corridor's density and the transit dependence of many of its residents.
Automobile travel on Colfax involves handling a street built before modern traffic engineering standards, one that intersects with dozens of signalized cross streets, driveways, and turning movements. Construction zones along the corridor, including near George Washington High School and in the vicinity of York Street, have created intermittent lane reductions. Traffic engineers recommend the zipper merge technique for these situations. In a zipper merge, drivers use all available lanes until the lane-reduction point and then alternate turns merging in sequence, which distributes traffic more evenly and reduces the overall length of backups compared to early-merge behavior. The Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT) has promoted zipper merging through public education campaigns.[14] Still, corridor-specific signage instructing drivers to use the zipper merge is not uniformly deployed along Colfax, and driver familiarity with the technique varies. Inadequate advance signage at Colfax merge points contributes to driver confusion, and the