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Most buildings hold themselves up. The Kettle Building at 1433 Larimer Street does not — at least not on its own. Built in 1873 as one of the first examples of party-wall construction in Denver, it relies entirely on shared walls with the buildings on either side for structural support. No independent side walls. It is Denver Landmark #23, and its construction method tells a story about how cities grow. Denver Historic Landmarks Map
Party-wall construction — where adjacent buildings share structural walls — is the standard method for dense urban commercial districts. In 1873 Denver, it was new. The Kettle Building, named for an early tenant who sold cast-iron kettles and cooking equipment to frontier households, was among the first Denver buildings to use this technique.
The method reflected Denver's rapid development pace. The city was growing faster than builders could respond with fully independent structures. Party walls allowed developers to build narrow-lot commercial buildings quickly and cheaply by treating the whole block as an interconnected structural system. It was practical, economical, and permanent — the Kettle Building has stood for 150 years on the strength of its neighbors.
Like its Larimer Square neighbors, the Kettle Building survived the 1960s urban renewal threat thanks to Dana Crawford's preservation effort. It was restored as part of the Larimer Square Historic District designation in 1971 and today serves as commercial retail space in one of Denver's most visited historic blocks. Denver's Oldest Landmarks
The building is two-story brick commercial vernacular — Italianate details at the storefront, corbeled brick above the second floor, and segmental arched windows that align with the rhythm of the Larimer Square streetscape. The party-wall construction is invisible from the exterior; the building looks like any other 1870s Larimer Street storefront. The distinction is structural: remove either neighbor, and the Kettle Building would need new walls. Explore Denver
Discover what makes Denver unique — from the Mile High skyline to vibrant neighborhood culture.
Cast-iron kettles and cooking equipment were among the most-demanded goods in frontier Denver in the 1870s. Every household needed a cooking stove and pots; every mining camp needed cooking equipment that could withstand mountain conditions. The hardware merchants who occupied Larimer Street supplied not just the city but the entire mountain mining economy — goods arrived by wagon from Kansas City and were redistributed up the mountain toll roads to camps at Leadville, Central City, and Black Hawk.
<strong>Kettle Building — 1433 Larimer Street, Larimer Square</strong><br/>Exterior viewable at all times (public street).<br/>Interior: commercial tenant (varies).<br/>Part of the Larimer Square Historic District — free history walks on select dates.<br/>Nearest RTD: Union Station — 10-minute walk.
1433 Larimer Street, in the heart of Larimer Square, LoDo. A 10-minute walk from Union Station (RTD A/B/C/E/W lines). The entire Larimer Square block is pedestrian-accessible.
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