Why you'd want to live in Old North End
The Old North End is the neighborhood that Colorado Springs built its identity around. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982, this remarkable residential district stretches from downtown Colorado Springs northward toward Colorado College, its wide, tree-canopied streets lined with Victorian, Craftsman, Mediterranean Revival, and Colonial homes built during the city's economic booms of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. It is one of the largest historic preservation districts west of the Mississippi River — and walking through it, that scale becomes immediately apparent. The gold rush from Cripple Creek in the 1890s brought sudden wealth to Colorado Springs, and the Old North End is where much of that wealth chose to live. The homes here were built to impress — stately two- and three-story structures with generous front porches, turrets, original hardwood floors, leaded glass windows, and the kind of craftsmanship that simply cannot be replicated at any price today. Residents who have lived here for decades speak of the neighborhood the way people speak of a place that shaped them, not just housed them.

