• Original Reporting
  • References

The Trust Project

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Illustration of a cityscape featuring buildings such as a pharmacy, supermarket, bank and coffee shop, with cars on the road, a pedestrian observing street signs about Colorado motorcycle law, and an airplane flying overhead.
(Provided by Gigafact)

Yes.

Just over half of all homes in Denver are made of brick or brick-composite materials, the result of a 19th-century ordinance aimed at making the city more fire-resistant. 

Almost 53% of residential properties are made of brick or clad with brick, according to the Denver Assessor’s Office. Forty-four percent of single family residences are made of only brick. 

When Denver was founded, in 1858, many homes were made of highly flammable logs and native pine. That began to change after a devastating fire swept through downtown April 19, 1863. The city lost 70 buildings and 40% of the business district to the fire, around $4.1 million in losses today. 

The day after the fire, the city approved an ordinance requiring buildings to be made with fireproof materials, such as stone or brick. The ordinance remained in effect until around 1960. The local availability of clay made brick the leading building material.

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References:

Email to The Colorado Sun, Denver Department of Finance, Apr. 29, 2025. Source link.

Great Fire of 1863, Colorado Encyclopedia, accessed in April 2025. Source link.

Denver’s Brick Legacy is Rooted in A Fire and The ‘Smell of Burning Bacon In The Air,’ Colorado Public Radio, July 1, 2019. Source link.

Por recently graduated from CU Boulder with a master’s degree in journalism and is interested in writing about the environment and exploring local stories. When not working on some form of writing, Por is either looking for Thai food or petting...