Mission Statement:

Cole Neighborhood Association is...family and friends working together to preserve the architectural history and cultural diversity of the neighborhood while preparing today for a prosperous future.

The next CNA meeting will be Thurs 23 Feb from 6-7:30pm at Wyatt-Edison School (36th and Franklin)

The next CNA meeting will be Thurs 23 Feb from 6-7:30pm at Wyatt-Edison School (36th and Franklin)
Regular meetings of CNA take place on the last Thursday of each month.

Vote for September's Yard of the Month (scroll down for pics)

March 11, 2010

Free & Affordable Street Trees for your Neighborhood!

Applications are available for The Park People’s annual Denver Digs Trees Spring Street Tree Distribution on April 17, 2010. Please help us spread the word and get more trees in your neighborhood!

Denver Digs has provided more than 38,000 affordable and free street trees to Denver residents and neighborhoods over the past 18 years. We offer a variety of beautiful trees that provide many services to our neighborhoods and make our communities healthier, more livable places.

These street trees are FREE to residents in our target neighborhoods – and only $25 each for all other Denver residents! (Trees this size usually sell for more than $100)
Target neighborhoods: Athmar Park, Baker, Barnum, Barnum West, Chaffee Park, Clayton, Cole, Elyria-Swansea, Five Points, Globeville, Jefferson Park, Lincoln Park, Montbello, Northeast Park Hill, Ruby Hill, Skyland, Sunnyside, Sun Valley, Valverde, Villa Park, West Colfax, Westwood, and Whittier. While trees for all other neighborhoods cost $25, “Treeships” are available for those with financial hardship.

The deadline for Tree Applications is February 15, and we will NOT issue extensions this year. So we need to get the word out to residents ASAP.

0 comments:

What new business would you most like to see in Cole? Please select your top 3 picks.

Considering current and future development and redevelopment in Cole, what type of residential options do you feel best fill the future needs of the neighborhood?

Cole Neighborhood | Denver, Colorado

Cole Neighborhood | Denver, Colorado

About Me

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The Cole neighborhood, which became part of the city in 1874, stretches from 32nd Avenue to 40th Avenue and from York Street to Downing Street. Cole Junior High School and the neighborhood itself are named after Carlos M. Cole, a superintendent of Denver's Public Schools who was instrumental in establishing junior high schools in Denver. More than half of the residential blocks were developed prior to 1900. Several historic buildings remain, like the cleanly designed red brick and sandstone Wyatt School on 3620 Franklin Street, built in 1887 and named after its former principal George W. Wyatt.