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For inhabitants of the Washington Park neighborhood, the Old South Gaylord Street shopping district must be a true oasis.
The Berkeley Park neighborhood has to be the best place in Denver for something to go wrong with your drive shaft.
Oh, the things that go on in the shadow of the Capitol. OK, we won't go into that here. Suffice it to say that if it's part of life, it's part of life on Capitol Hill.
In Evergreen, they've cast out mediocrity. On some fateful day, there must have been a town meeting at which it was decided that shop owners wouldn't take on too much - they'd pick just one or two niches each and fill every square inch of them.
OK, we'll give 'em another chance. After all, until September, the Red Sox were the best team in baseball. That's five months of dominance, not just one. So the Rockies really had their hands full in their World Series debut.
On the outskirts of town, with lofts rising where once stood mills and factories, the old and the new are being fused into something that transcends both.
Cultures converge in the Leetsdale-Parker corridor like nowhere else in the metro area. There's Little Russia along Leetsdale Drive, Koreatown along South Havana Street, the Greek Orthodox Community Center on East Alameda Avenue and the Colorado Muslim Society on South Parker Road.
As the bricks and mortar crumble around independent booksellers, some are packing it in while others "embrace the tiger."
At the end of a day spent on South Federal Boulevard, you’re likely to feel saturated in at least one culture other than your own.
Pull into the Far East Center parking lot beneath a pagoda-like archway and enter a world far, far from home. Forget downtown - it's Chinatown, Jake. After all, you don't find things like periwinkle meat and three-for-$1 duck eggs in LoDo, right?
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