The Brown Palace Hotel
321 17th Street
Denver, Colorado 80202
Toll Free (800) 321.2599
NORA has secured a great rate of just $185/night at this amazing, historic property. Wireless Internet access is complimentary for NORA members.
The Brown Palace Hotel has set the standard for downtown Denver hotels for more than a century. Knee-deep in tradition and historic ambience, the Brown has continually renovated and modernized the entire structure to meet the needs and cares of today's traveler.
As a result, The Brown Palace has been attracting the city's most prominent elite ever since. Everyone from presidents to royalty have slept at this exclusive hotel in downtown Denver, Colorado.
- Conveniently located in the heart of downtown Denver, Colorado:
- 3 miles from upscale shopping in Cherry Creek North
- 6 blocks from the Colorado Convention Center
- 10 blocks from world class culture at the Denver Performing Arts Complex
- Only 22 miles from Denver International Airport (DEN)
As Denver's only Mobil Four-Star and AAA Four-Diamond hotel, The Brown Palace is a national treasure. Experience the peak of high-end luxury from our select location in the heart of the Mile High City.
Interesting facts about the Brown Palace
- On Aug. 12, 1892 - 114 years ago - The Brown Palace Hotel opened its doors in the heart of downtown Denver. The hotel has remained open and welcomed guests every minute of every day, since opening.
- Every U.S. president has visited The Brown Palace since Teddy Roosevelt (1905), with the exception of Calvin Coolidge.
- The Brown Palace contains 12,400 surface feet of onyx, a semiprecious variety of quartz, which was the most ever used in a single building at the time the hotel was constructed.
- The hotel's original artesian well is located 720 feet deep beneath the lobby floor and still provides water to every faucet in the hotel.
- Four of the hotel's suites are named for their famous residents: The Beatles Suite, Eisenhower Suite, Reagan Suite, and Teddy Roosevelt Suite.
- Before the Beatles' visit in 1964, the hotel saw a great surge in applications for housekeepers by young girls. After the Beatles' stay, monetary offers were made for the dishes from which they ate and the sheets on which they slept.
- In 1937, the hotel opened the Skyline Apartments which housed permanent residents in suites with kitchens on the top two floors of the hotel. The last of these residents moved out in the mid-1980s.
- The Brown Palace Club, located on the second floor, served as campaign headquarters for Dwight D. Eisenhower prior to his election as president.
- Two of the cast iron grillwork panels on the railing surrounding the hotel's eight-story atrium are upside down.
- Soldiers of the 10th Mountain Division tried rappelling from the balconies during a visit to the hotel during World War II.
- Except for crackers and sandwich bread, the hotel prepares all of its own baked goods in a unique, carousel oven - catalogued at more than 50 years old. The oven is one of only three in the world known to be in existence and is still used every day.
- President Eisenhower hit a wayward golf ball while practicing in the room and made a dent in the fireplace mantel in the Eisenhower Suite. It remains today as a souvenir.