You are here

Colorado State Capitol

-A A +A
1886–1908, Elijah E. Myers, Frank E. Edbrooke. E. Colfax to E. 14th aves. between Lincoln and Grant sts.
  • Colorado State Capitol (Richard W. Longstreth)
  • Colorado State Capitol (Tom Noel)
  • (Damie Stillman)
  • (Damie Stillman)
  • (Damie Stillman)
  • (Damie Stillman)
  • (Damie Stillman)
  • (Damie Stillman)
  • (Damie Stillman)
  • (Damie Stillman)
  • (Damie Stillman)
  • (Damie Stillman)
  • (Damie Stillman)
  • (Damie Stillman)

The main axis of the Civic Center plan is decisively terminated on the east by the capitol, a cruciform building of four stories culminating in a gold dome. Like many domed state capitols of its era, it is inspired by the national Capitol. The exterior walls are Colorado gray granite from the Aberdeen Quarry in Gunnison County. Lighter, cheaper, granite-colored cast iron is used for the three cylindrical stages of the dome. Colorado mining magnates donated the 24-carat gold leaf on the 272-foot-high dome, which was regilded in 1949, 1980, and 1991.

Elijah Myers also designed state capitols for Idaho, Michigan, Texas, and Utah. As in his other statehouses, Myers gave Colorado a classical design of Renaissance origins but with unmistakably nineteenth-century proportions and handling of the orders. Similar, symmetrical bays characterize all four sides, with a west entrance portico overlooking Civic Center. Triple-arched central entrances on each side are topped by triangular pediments with bas-relief sculptures.

The Capitol Board of Managers dismissed Myers in 1889 to save money. Board member Otto Mears explained, “The state has got his plans, and has paid for them. You see we don't need him.” Myers, who was then over sixty, responded that “for a man of my age and experience, this is a most unpleasant occurrence” and returned to his home in Michigan. Frank E. Edbrooke, who had placed second in the original architectural competition, completed the structure, basically following Myers's 1886 design. Edbrooke suggested a gold rather than copper skin for the dome and substituted rich Composite capitals on the porticoes for Myers's more austere Tuscan capitals. The other obvious change was the disappearance of the allegorical female figure meant to represent Colorado with which Myers had crowned the dome. Apparently the legislature, after considerable study of models in various states of dress, could not agree on which was the most shapely.

Capitol interiors feature Beulah red marble and Colorado Yule marble wain-scoting and brass fixtures. Of 160 rooms, the most noteworthy are the old Supreme Court chambers, the Senate and House chambers, and the first-floor rotunda, whose walls display murals (1938) by Colorado's premier muralist, Allen Tupper True, and a poem by Colorado poet laureate Thomas Hornsby Ferril.

The capitol complex has grown to include the WPA-funded State Capitol Annex ( DV001.1; 1939, Arthur A. Fisher, Sidney Frazier, G. Meredith Musick, Frederick Mountjoy, C. Francis Pillsbury, Charles S. Thomas), 1375 Sherman Street (at East 14th Avenue) (NR), a starved-classical box. The restored State Office Building ( DV001.2; 1921, William N. Bowman; 1985, Urban Design Group), 201 East Colfax Avenue, is a Renaissance palace, especially notable for its interior court.

Writing Credits

Author: 
Thomas J. Noel

If SAH Archipedia has been useful to you, please consider supporting it.

SAH Archipedia tells the story of the United States through its buildings, landscapes, and cities. This freely available resource empowers the public with authoritative knowledge that deepens their understanding and appreciation of the built environment. But the Society of Architectural Historians, which created SAH Archipedia with University of Virginia Press, needs your support to maintain the high-caliber research, writing, photography, cartography, editing, design, and programming that make SAH Archipedia a trusted online resource available to all who value the history of place, heritage tourism, and learning.

,