Colorado Springs was built on Cripple Creek gold rush money. When the gold petered out, the city began to reinvent the economy around auto tourism and the military. After WWII, thousands of acres of open land were donated to the Army and Air Force, resulting in Fort Carson, NORAD, the Air Force Academy, Peterson Field. etc.
With the huge influx of military personnel, not to mention demand for inexpensive, postwar housing, Colorado Springs spread far out from the original town core. If you fly into COS airport these days you'll see monotonous, endless suburbia covering what was once open land. Of course this is true of most American cities.
Unfortunately, Colorado Springs lost many downtown landmarks along with history and heritage. The city planners in the 1950's believed you had to get rid of the old in order to build the new. The magnificent old Antler's Hotel on Pikes Peak Avenue closed in 1964 and was torn down.
The Antlers Hotel was one of the dramatic architectural causalities, and it was replaced with something that now looks like a tired, concrete Marriott. The bland Colorado Springs downtown is the result of what happened in the '60s and '70s.
I remember the theaters better than the movies, with the exception of Hard Day's Night at The Chief in 1964, a turning point in my young life. I suddenly wanted to be any place except boring Colorado Springs.
Another place of teenage memories, but you can use your imagination on that one!
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