The Top 11 Hotels Near Benson Sculpture Garden
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A 1923 brick landmark in Old Town Fort Collins, the Armstrong Hotel has been meticulously restored into a stylish boutique property anchoring the block with three distinct venues. The underground Ace Gillett's Lounge and street-level Ace Café command their respective floors with the ease of a place that's earned its position.
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The Elizabeth occupies Old Town Fort Collins with the casual sophistication of a Marriott boutique property that treats vinyl and guitars as room amenities rather than afterthoughts. Its restaurants and live music venue suggest a hotel that has internalized the city's creative energy without performing it.
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St Julien Hotel & Spa sits just west of Pearl Street's pedestrian spine, offering 201 rooms of understated luxury in a town already blessed with mountain vistas and collegiate energy. The hotel settles into downtown Boulder with the confidence of a place that knows its surroundings need no embellishment.
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The Crawford Hotel occupies the restored lobby of Denver's Beaux-Arts Union Station, where the marble counters and soaring ceilings still serve both guests and rail passengers in a single, purposeful space. In a revived downtown that needed exactly this kind of anchor, the hotel reads as less boutique retreat than civic restoration made habitable.
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The Westin's cantilevered geometry echoes the airport terminal's tent-like profile, a visual conversation between building and landscape that transforms a layover into something approaching deliberation. What once signaled mere convenience—a bed between flights—now asks you to notice the architecture, the proximity, the deliberate design that treats transit as occasion rather than interruption.
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A modest contemporary structure in Denver's evolving Highlands neighborhood opens onto interiors that defer to Victorian-era details, honoring the district's founding while embracing its present appetite for change. The hotel trades the anonymity of chain modernism for a more rooted sense of place, one that holds local history and innovation in uneasy but productive balance.
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In RiNo's transforming gallery quarter, Catbird applies Dutch modernist restraint to Denver boutique lodging, proving that studio rooms need not sacrifice comfort. The result is efficient without feeling cramped—a hotel that understands how to make small spaces breathe.
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A converted iron works in Denver's RiNo district now houses a hundred modernist rooms where polished concrete and Baltic birch nod to the site's industrial past. Garage-door windows that open fully to Colorado air suggest the hotel itself refuses to fully close—a metaphor for a neighborhood still making itself up.
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The Ramble Hotel anchors River North's industrial-turned-hip district with cast-iron bones and interiors that channel a seventeenth-century Parisian salon, all executed with contemporary restraint. Death & Co., the sequel to the storied East Village bar, operates within its confines alongside Dana Rodriguez's pan-Latin restaurant, grounding the aesthetic in actual culinary ambition.
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The Rally Hotel sits at the center of Denver's revived Lower Downtown, where Coors Field anchored a neighborhood transformation into dining and nightlife. A luxury boutique property within the mixed-use McGregor Square, it operates as both destination and gateway to the district's vibrant scene.
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In a converted brickworks between Denver and the Rockies, the Eddy anchors itself to Golden's brewing heritage while offering rooftop views and firepit lounging for hikers and urbanites alike. The taproom and adjoining hotel create overlapping public spaces where the tired and the curious gather to decompress in the same breath.