91桃色

Skip to Content

Geographers鈥 New Book Charts Denver鈥檚 Emergence as a 鈥楴ext Frontier鈥 City

Back to Article Listing

Author(s)

Tamara Chapman

Contributing Writer

鈥楳etropolitan Denver鈥 recounts a tale of growth and change

Feature  • Profile  •
Eric Boschmann and Andrew Goetz have collaborated on "Metropolitan Denver"

With elections for the city鈥檚 mayor and council coming up in May, and with growth sure to be a topic of debate and contention, voters may want to ponder Denver鈥檚 journey to the present before making decisions about its future.

To get up to speed, they can start with 鈥淢etropolitan Denver: Growth and Change in the Mile High City鈥 (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018) by professors Andrew Goetz and Eric Boschmann of the 91桃色鈥檚 Department of Geography and the Environment. A recent installment in the publisher鈥檚 Metropolitan Portraits series, the book joins a shelf of volumes on urban areas with distinctive stories, among them Northern New Jersey, Phoenix, Toronto, Detroit and Miami. Each portrait approaches its subject differently, with some focusing on the forces driving transformation and others looking at the challenges associated with, say, living in the shadow of a bigger berg.听听

鈥淭he way that we frame it for the Denver book, [we look at] what is Denver today and how did it come to be this way,鈥 Boschmann says. This approach makes the book useful not just for voters but for city planners, zoning officials, policy makers 鈥 for anyone, in fact, with a role to play in shaping Denver鈥檚 days to come. It鈥檚 also good for old-timers who want a refresher course on the city鈥檚 evolution and for newcomers who, as Boschmann puts it, 鈥渨ant to understand, what does it mean to live in this landscape, what does it mean to live in this place.鈥澨

The Denver story, served up with what the authors call 鈥渁 geographic perspective,鈥 ranges over 161 years of boom-and-bust development 鈥 from Denver鈥檚 emergence as a remote outpost to its heyday as an oil-and-gas commercial center to its current status as a 鈥淣ext Frontier鈥 city, a designation made in 2010 by the Brookings Institution鈥檚 鈥淪tate of Metropolitan America鈥 report. As a Next Frontier city, Goetz explains, Denver joins Seattle, Austin and other metroplexes whose levels of population growth, diversity and education outpace the national average.听

Although they are positioned for prosperous futures, Next Frontier cities face their own set of perplexing problems. Denver鈥檚 are by no means unique 鈥 congestion, deteriorating air quality, housing affordability and the resulting displacement of marginalized populations 鈥 but they do require thoughtful solutions. 听听

鈥淥n the surface, there鈥檚 not a lot to be found that is going wrong,鈥 Goetz says, 鈥渂ut you scratch a little bit deeper, and you see a lot of the same problems and same issues as every other city.鈥

Goetz and Boschmann are just the duo to situate these issues in detailed context. The former is Denver鈥檚 go-to authority on transportation infrastructure, urban economic growth and smart growth planning, while Boschmann researches job accessibility for the working poor, urban sustainability and Denver as an urban place. He came to Denver from the Midwest and was immediately struck by how the city has been shaped by its landscape and by a population that, for the most part, came here from other places.

鈥淥ne of the themes that we talk about is that Denver is a city of transplants. I鈥檓 a transplant, Andy鈥檚 a transplant. Many of us are from somewhere else,鈥 Boschmann says.

As were the city鈥檚 earliest leaders, who made decisions that invited and shaped Denver鈥檚 growth. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a combination of factors,鈥 Goetz says, 鈥渢hat influence a trajectory. One of those certainly is leadership and the choices [it] makes.鈥 听

In other words, Denver鈥檚 spot on the map didn鈥檛 materialize by accident. In 1867, to ensure that Denver could capitalize on construction of the transcontinental railroad through Wyoming, city leaders raised funds to build a spur rail line to Cheyenne. This made it possible for Denver to serve as a transportation crossroads and ensured the city would not wither into a ghost town. Decades later, other Denver leaders embraced the City Beautiful movement, called on citizens to 鈥淚magine a Great City鈥 and partnered with neighboring metropolitan administrations to advance the economic, environmental and cultural interests of the entire region.

For readers not versed in the city鈥檚 post-World War II history, 鈥淢etropolitan Denver鈥 explains how Denver became home to the largest concentration of federal agencies outside of Washington, D.C. By inviting these well-paying jobs to Denver, the city was able to build an economic base largely free of heavy industry. That, Goetz says, helped it avoid the problems facing Rust Belt cities when so much manufacturing was transferred overseas. Years later, when the city hitched its fortunes to the oil-and-gas industry, it learned the hard way about the benefits of diversifying its economy. 听

Goetz and Boschmann also look at Denver鈥檚 historic and emerging challenges related to land use, air quality and transportation, as well as changing demographics, urban revitalization and gentrification. As an added bonus, the book explores the city鈥檚 changing sense of self and looks at how its efforts at placemaking have evolved, with the 鈥淨ueen City of the Plains鈥 moniker ceding elevation to the Mile High City. 听听

The Queen City identity originated in the era of miners and plains-focused homesteaders, Boschmann says. 鈥淔rom the perspective of the westward expansion era, Denver became an urban oasis in the vastness of the American plains. But by the latter half of the 20th century and the rise of tourism and skiing, that perspective changed, and Denver鈥檚 identity became more associated with the mountain landscape in its backyard.鈥

Where is Denver headed next? Goetz and Boschmann won鈥檛 speculate 鈥 鈥渨hat [we] don鈥檛 know,鈥 the latter says, 鈥渋s how to read the tea leaves in any way鈥 鈥 but they both express optimism about the city鈥檚 chances for maintaining its high quality of life.

鈥淩eally, it is great civic leadership that has helped to keep Denver the way it is,鈥 Boschmann says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 going to grow; it鈥檚 going to change, but [the question is,] how to do that in a way that doesn鈥檛 harm the environment too much or make it too unlivable.鈥