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    Hotel in Denver, United States

    The Crawford Hotel

    625pts

    Adaptive Monument Hospitality

    The Crawford Hotel, Hotel in Denver

    About The Crawford Hotel

    A Michelin Key-awarded boutique hotel occupying Denver's landmarked Union Station, The Crawford delivers 112 rooms across former office floors above a 65-foot Beaux-Arts concourse that still serves active rail passengers. Priced from $791 per night, it sits at the upper tier of LoDo's hotel market, with room categories ranging from Victorian-inflected to post-industrial loft style.

    A Working Monument That Became a Hotel

    Union Station's central hall doesn't ask you to imagine what it once was. The 65-foot coffered ceiling, the original terrazzo floors, the brass fittings — they're all present and functioning, and so is the station itself. Amtrak trains still depart from the platforms below. The murmur of travellers with luggage mingles with that of hotel guests heading up to their rooms, and the combined effect is something that purpose-built lobbies spend considerable budgets trying to manufacture: the sense that a place genuinely matters to its city. The Crawford Hotel, which occupies the upper floors of this Beaux-Arts landmark at 1701 Wynkoop Street, has that quality at no additional charge. It comes with the building.

    Denver's hotel market has diversified considerably over the past decade. The Four Seasons Denver and Clayton Hotel & Members Club anchor opposite ends of the spectrum — the former a full-service luxury tower, the latter a members-oriented concept in Cherry Creek. The Crawford sits in a different category entirely: an adaptive reuse property where the building's civic history is the primary design asset, and where the Michelin Key recognition awarded in 2024 places it alongside a cohort of hotels being evaluated not just on thread count but on the totality of the guest experience.

    What the Building Does to You

    The atmospheric logic of The Crawford is set before you reach your room. Arriving through the main concourse, you pass beneath a ceiling high enough that sound behaves differently , conversations carry and then dissolve, footsteps echo briefly, the ambient noise of the station creates a low, civic hum that is part of the hotel's texture. This is not a hushed, hermetically sealed luxury environment. It is a living public space that a hotel happens to share, and that distinction matters enormously if you're deciding whether this is the right fit for your stay.

    The guest rooms occupy what were originally office spaces arranged around the central atrium , practical rooms built for clerks and administrators, later abandoned during decades of urban neglect before a substantial renovation brought them back as hotel accommodation. The conversion required significant structural work to create habitable spaces from what were essentially corridors and filing rooms, and the results vary by room category in ways that make pre-booking research worthwhile. The aesthetic choices across the property span three distinct registers: Victorian-inflected rooms that reference the station's late 19th-century origins, Art Deco-styled rooms that nod to the building's interwar period, and post-industrial loft configurations with higher ceilings and more contemporary material palettes. Each speaks to a different chapter in the building's history, and the leading approach is to choose the period that aligns with your own aesthetic sensibilities rather than treating them as interchangeable.

    LoDo as the Hotel's Extended Program

    Lower Downtown, which locals abbreviate to LoDo, spent the better part of the late 20th century in various states of post-industrial dormancy before redevelopment transformed it into one of Denver's most active central districts. Union Station sits at its geographic and symbolic heart, and The Crawford's address at 1701 Wynkoop Street places guests within walking distance of a density of bars, restaurants, and cultural institutions that few other Denver hotels can match without a car. The Tattered Cover bookstore occupies a building directly across the street , the kind of independent bookseller that functions as a genuine neighbourhood institution. David Adjaye's Museum of Contemporary Art is close enough to reach on foot. The streets running off Wynkoop are lined with the kind of restaurants and bars that LoDo has built its reputation on over the past twenty years.

    For guests interested in exploring Denver more broadly, the hotel's position inside a working train station adds a logistical dimension that's unusual in the American boutique hotel context. Denver Union Station is the hub of the city's light rail and commuter rail network, which means that certain Denver neighbourhoods , including those served by the A Line to Denver International Airport , are accessible directly from the building's ground floor. Properties like the AC Hotel Denver Downtown or the Apiary Hotel are central, but they don't offer this kind of transit integration. The Denver Union Station area's transformation is itself worth tracking as a case study in how American cities have reconsidered their historic transit infrastructure as urban assets rather than liabilities.

    The ground floor of the building extends the hotel's offer beyond the rooms themselves. A selection of shops, restaurants, bars, and cafes operate within the concourse, which means guests can eat and drink without stepping outside , though the neighbourhood's density makes doing so equally appealing. The specific operators and concepts in this space are worth checking at booking time, as the mix has evolved since the hotel's opening and is likely to continue doing so.

    Where It Sits in Denver's Accommodation Spectrum

    At a rate from $791 per night, The Crawford positions itself at the upper end of Denver's boutique hotel pricing. That figure puts it above mid-market options like the All Inn Hotel and the Apiary Residences, and it competes for the same guest as the Halcyon in Cherry Creek, though the two properties serve quite different neighbourhood contexts. The Halcyon is embedded in Cherry Creek's retail and restaurant district; The Crawford is inside a national historic landmark with an active transit function. These are different propositions for different travel priorities.

    For travellers accustomed to adaptive reuse hotels in other American cities , think the kinds of railway hotel conversions that have appeared in cities from Kansas City to New Orleans , The Crawford will feel like a familiar format executed with particular ambition. For guests whose reference points are more traditional luxury properties like the Four Seasons at The Surf Club or resort-led experiences like Amangiri in Canyon Point, the Crawford's urban, historically charged atmosphere represents a genuinely different mode of travel. Neither is a criticism , they're different tools for different purposes.

    The Michelin Key recognition (2024) is a meaningful signal here. Michelin's hotel evaluation framework, which the guide introduced to the United States market in recent years, assesses properties on criteria that include architecture and design, service quality, and the overall coherence of the guest experience. A single Key does not imply the level of comprehensive luxury associated with three-Key or Palace-designated properties , those tend to be full-service properties with spas, fine dining, and concierge depth, such as Aman New York or Raffles Boston. What a single Key does signal is that the property has cleared a quality threshold in design coherence and experience that puts it ahead of the unmarked field. For a boutique property built inside a converted train station, that's a substantive credential.

    Planning Your Stay

    The Crawford Hotel's 112 rooms are distributed across three style categories , Victorian, Art Deco, and loft , making room selection more consequential than at a standardised hotel. Rates start at $791 per night, and the property sits at 1701 Wynkoop Street in LoDo, directly inside Denver Union Station. The station's ground floor provides direct access to Denver's light rail network, including the A Line connection to Denver International Airport, which makes car-free arrival and departure from the hotel genuinely practical. Dining, drinking, and retail options are available within the building, with the broader LoDo neighbourhood extending the options considerably on foot. For a fuller picture of Denver's dining scene , which has matured significantly around and beyond LoDo in recent years , the EP Club Denver guide covers the current restaurant field in detail.

    Travellers comparing the Crawford against other landmark adaptive reuse stays in the United States might also consider the Troutbeck in Amenia, SingleThread Farm Inn in Healdsburg, or The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City as reference points for what well-executed, historically grounded accommodation looks like at this tier. Each is doing something different with its inherited architecture, and the Crawford's civic-scale ambition , a hotel inside a building that is simultaneously a public transit hub, a restaurant destination, and a neighbourhood gathering point , is arguably the most complex version of that challenge in the American boutique hotel field.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Which room category should I book at The Crawford Hotel?

    The Crawford's three room categories , Victorian, Art Deco, and post-industrial loft , reflect different periods of the building's history rather than a simple tiered quality hierarchy. The Victorian rooms lean into the station's original late 19th-century character with period-referencing detail. The Art Deco rooms occupy a middle stylistic register. The loft configurations offer higher ceilings and a more contemporary material palette, with a post-industrial feel that reads differently from the ornate concourse below. The choice depends on aesthetic preference. If you want the room to feel continuous with the building's grandest architectural moment, the Victorian or Art Deco categories make that connection most legibly. If you prefer a contrast , a spare, light-filled room above a gilded public hall , the loft category is the right call. At the $791 entry-point rate, checking which categories are available at your travel dates before committing to a specific room type is worthwhile, as availability across the three styles will vary.

    What's the defining thing about The Crawford Hotel?

    Denver awarded The Crawford a Michelin Key in 2024, and the credential points to the thing that actually distinguishes it: the hotel is inside a functioning civic monument that never stopped being part of the city's daily life. Most hotels at this price point in Denver offer a contained luxury experience , polished, service-rich, and atmospherically self-contained. The Crawford offers the opposite: a hotel experience that is porous to the city, where the public concourse is also your lobby, where Amtrak passengers and hotel guests share the same 65-foot atrium, and where the neighbourhood's energy , LoDo's bars, the Tattered Cover, the Museum of Contemporary Art , arrives at the front door rather than being held at a distance. For travellers who find sealed luxury environments limiting, this is the argument for The Crawford over peers like the Four Seasons Denver. For those who want that sealing, it's equally the argument for going elsewhere.

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