Historic concert venue, park and amphitheatre in a spectacular setting, Red Rocks is Colorado's iconic entertainment venue, hosting more than 150 events annually including concerts, graduations, private events, film screenings and fitness events. Rolling Stone Magazine has named Red Rocks the "Best Amphitheatre in America."
As the city’s largest museum, the Denver Art Museum offers plenty to look at inside as well as outside. With its multiple buildings including the castle-like structure of the North Building and the titanium “prow” that reaches across 13th Avenue, this is a building that is admired just as much from the outside as it is on the inside.
We invite you to explore Denver's local beer culture and visit some of the 100 brewpubs, breweries and taprooms in the metro area. As always, please drink safely and responsibly with a designated driver. Get a taste of our local flavors by exploring our Denver Beer Trail! Find a list of our breweries below along with an interactive map to help you navigate your Denver brewery experience.
Greeted with a giant dinosaur skeleton in the main lobby, the Denver Museum of Nature and Science offers much more than what meets the eye. Gaining notoriety over the years for their sensational exhibits, the museum prides itself on offering a variety of shows that cover the blend between culture, nature, and science.
Meow Wolf’s third permanent exhibition is now open in Denver, CO. Convergence Station is unforgettable, transformational, and not to be missed. Discover immersive psychedelic, mind-bending art and an underlying rich narrative as you take a journey of discovery into a surreal, science-fictional epic.
The brick-paved Pearl Street is Boulder's heart and soul — a central gathering place where locals and visitors alike come to stroll and shop among the historic storefronts, dine at buzzed-about restaurants, sip coffee, throw back a microbrew or simply people-watch. If you do only one thing in Boulder, walking this pedestrian mall should probably be it.
Boulder's beloved Flatirons — those slanting, massive slabs of sandstone that form Boulder's backdrop from just about any angle — tend to have a slightly mystical effect on visitors. We're willing to bet you'll be drawn to them, and the Chautauqua area affords the best way to get a closer look. Gaze up at them from the hiking area's beautiful meadow, where dozens of trails lead off into the foothills, then hike right up into the Flatirons if you are seeking a bit more exercise and adventure.
Best views in Boulder! Located in a naturally occurring, acoustically sound depression in a cliff overlooking the City of Boulder, this open-air theater is one of three structures on Flagstaff Mountain built by the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC). Completed in 1934 and providing seating for 150 people, Sunrise Circle Amphitheater is comprised of twelve rows of semi-circular stone benches facing east to an elevated stone stage. Constructed of fieldstone cobbles and tinted concrete, concentric benches are nestled into two terraces and accessed by four flights of irregular sandstone steps. Encircled on three sides by ponderosa pines, the amphitheater is accessed from a nearby parking area via rustic trails lined by low fieldstone walls.