A tour of Denver's Union Station gives you a solid 45-90 minutes inside one of the city's few remaining grand historic buildings. Expect to hear about its 1914 Beaux-Arts architecture, its years as a failing eyesore, and the major renovation that turned it into the busy transit hub and gathering spot it is today. You'll walk through the main hall, see the restored lighting and tile work, learn how trains, light rail, and buses all converge here, and usually finish with a quick look at the surrounding restaurants and bars. It's indoors, climate-controlled, and easy to combine with an afternoon of exploring LoDo.
Best time is late spring through early fall when the weather lets you wander outside afterward. Summer weekends get crowded with events, so weekday mornings are calmer. Expect to pay around $25-45 per person for a standard group tour; private or longer experiences run higher. Skip the basic self-guided phone app version if you want real context; the live guide makes the history stick. Pair it with lunch at the station instead of doing a separate food tour—it's more efficient and you get to sit in the space you just learned about.
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