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Fort Collins, Colorado

Home rule city and seat of Larimer County, Colorado, United States

Fort Collins, Colorado

Home rule city and seat of Larimer County, Colorado, United States

FieldValue
nameFort Collins, Colorado
settlement_typehome rule city
image_skylineDowntown Fort Collins Colorado.jpg
image_captionDowntown "Old Town" Fort Collins.
image_flagFlag of Fort Collins, Colorado.svg
image_mapLarimer County Colorado Incorporated and Unincorporated areas Fort Collins Highlighted 0827425.svg
map_captionLocation of Fort Collins in Larimer County, Colorado
<!-- Pushpin map -->pushpin_mapUSA#USA Colorado
pushpin_reliefyes
pushpin_labelFort Collins
pushpin_label_positionright
pushpin_map_captionLocation of the City of Fort Collins, Colorado.
<!-- Location -->coordinates
coordinates_footnotes
elevation_ft5004
elevation_footnotes
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameUnited States
subdivision_type1State
subdivision_name1Colorado
subdivision_type2County
subdivision_name2Larimer
<!-- Politics -->government_typehome rule city
leader_titleMayor
leader_nameEmily Francis
leader_title2City manager
leader_name2Kelly DiMartino
established_titleCommissioned
established_date1864
established_title2Incorporated
established_date2February 12, 1883
named_forWilliam O. Collins
<!-- Area --------------------->unit_prefUS
total_typeTotal
area_footnotes
area_total_km2151.444
area_land_km2148.179
area_water_km23.265
<!-- Population ----------------------->population_as_of2020
population_footnotes
population_total169,810
population_rank{{Ubl
population_density_sq_mi2,968
population_est170924
pop_est_as_of2024
pop_est_footnotes
population_urban326,332 (US: 123rd)
population_density_urban_km21,068
population_density_urban_sq_mi2,766.1
population_metro359,066 (US: 151st)
population_blank1_titleFront Range
population_blank15,055,344
<!-- General information -->timezoneMST
utc_offset−07:00
timezone_DSTMDT
utc_offset_DST−06:00
<!-- Area, postal, and other codes -->postal_code_typeZIP code
postal_code80521–80528
area_code_typeArea codes
area_code970/748
blank_nameGNIS place ID
blank_info
blank1_nameGNIS city ID
blank1_info
blank2_nameFIPS code
blank2_info
blank3_nameMajor highways
blank3_info[[File:I-25.svg24pxlink=Interstate 25 in Colorado]] [[File:US_287.svg24pxlink=U.S. Route 287 in Colorado]] [[File:Colorado_1.svg24pxlink=Colorado State Highway 1]] [[File:Colorado_14.svg24pxlink=Colorado State Highway 14]] [[File:Colorado_392.svg24pxlink=Colorado State Highway 392]]
website

| 4th in Colorado | 154th in the United States

Fort Collins is a home rule city in Larimer County, Colorado, United States, and serves as the county seat and most populous municipality of the county. It is the fourth-most populous city in Colorado with a population of 169,810 at the 2020 census,

Situated on the Cache La Poudre River along the Colorado Front Range, Fort Collins is located 60 mi north of the Colorado State Capitol in Denver and is a major city of the Front Range Urban Corridor. It is a prominent college town, home to Colorado State University, a public research university and the second-largest university by enrollment in Colorado.

History

The Northern Arapaho were centered in the Cache la Poudre River Valley near present-day Fort Collins. Friday, who attended school in St. Louis, Missouri in his youth, was a leader of the band of Arapahos as well as an interpreter, negotiator, and peacemaker. He made friends of white settlers who moved into the area, but was pushed out of Colorado in the 1860s.

Fort Collins was founded as a military outpost of the United States Army in 1864. It succeeded a previous encampment, known as Camp Collins, on the Cache la Poudre River, near what is known today as Laporte. Camp Collins was erected during the Indian wars of the mid-1860s to protect the Overland mail route that had been recently relocated through the region. Travelers crossing the county on the Overland Trail would camp there, but a flood destroyed the camp in June 1864. Afterward, the commander of the fort wrote to the commandant of Fort Laramie in southeast Wyoming, Colonel William O. Collins, suggesting that a site several miles farther down the river would make a good location for the fort. The post was manned originally by two companies of the 11th Ohio Volunteer Cavalry and never had walls. The Fort Collins, Colorado Territory, post office opened on June 27, 1865.

Bird's-eye view of Fort Collins in 1899
Fort Collins, facing west (1875)
Poudre Valley Bank, at Linden and Walnut, in Fort Collins (1908)

Settlers began arriving in the vicinity of the fort nearly immediately. The fort was decommissioned in 1867. The original fort site is now adjacent to the present historic "Old Town" portion of the city. The first school and church opened in 1866, and the town was platted in 1867. The civilian population of Fort Collins, led by local businessman Joseph Mason, led an effort to relocate the county seat to Fort Collins from LaPorte, and they were successful in 1868.

The city's first population boom came in 1872, with the establishment of an agricultural colony. Hundreds of settlers arrived, developing lots just south of the original Old Town. Tension between new settlers and earlier inhabitants led to political divisions in the new town, which was incorporated in 1873. Although the Colorado Agricultural College was founded in 1870, the first classes were held in 1879.

The Town of Fort Collins was incorporated on February 12, 1883. Beet tops, an industry supported by the college and its associated agricultural experiment station, proved to be an excellent and abundant food for local sheep, and by the early 1900s the area was being referred to as the "Lamb feeding capital of the world". In 1901 the Great Western sugar processing plant was built in the neighboring city of Loveland.

The region in 1906

Although the city was affected by the Great Depression and simultaneous drought, it nevertheless experienced slow and steady growth throughout the early part off the twentieth century. During the decade following World War II, the population doubled and an era of economic prosperity occurred. Old buildings were razed to make way for new, modern structures. Along with revitalization came many changes, including the closing of the Great Western sugar factory in 1955, and a new city charter, adopting a council-manager form of government in 1954. Similarly, Colorado State University's enrollment doubled during the 1960s, making it the city's primary economic force by the end of the century.

Fort Collins gained a reputation as a very conservative city in the twentieth century, with a prohibition of alcoholic beverages, a contentious political issue in the town's early decades, being retained from the late 1890s until student activism helped bring it to an end in 1969. During that same period, civil rights activism and anti-war disturbances heightened tensions in the city, including the burning of several buildings on the CSU campus.

During the late 20th century, Fort Collins expanded rapidly to the south, adding new development, including several regional malls. Management of city growth patterns became a political priority during the 1980s, as well as the revitalization of Fort Collins' Old Town with the creation of a Downtown Development Authority. In late July 1997, the city experienced a flash flood after and during a 31-hour period when 10 - of rain fell. The rainfall was the heaviest on record for an urban area of Colorado. Five people were killed and $5 million in damages were dealt to the city. The waters flooded Colorado State University's library and brought about $140 million in damages to the institution.

Geography

Fort Collins is situated at the base of the Rocky Mountain foothills of the northern Front Range, approximately 60 mi north of Denver, Colorado, and 45 mi south of Cheyenne, Wyoming. Elevation is 4982 ft above sea level. Geographic landmarks include Horsetooth Reservoir and Horsetooth Mountain—so named because of a tooth-shaped granite rock that dominates the city's western skyline. Longs Peak can also clearly be seen on a clear day to the southwest of the city.

The Cache La Poudre River and Spring Creek run through Fort Collins.

At the 2020 United States census, the town had a total area of 151.444 km2 including 3.265 km2 of water.

Climate

Fort Collins has a cold semi-arid climate (Köppen climate classification BSk). Its climate is characterized by warm to hot summers and long and moderately cold winters (with frequent warm spells due to downslope winds, and somewhat less common intervals of severe cold). The average temperature in December, the coldest month, is 31.1 °F. Annual snowfall averages 51.4 in, and can occur from early September through the end of May. Average precipitation overall is 15.88 in.

|Jan record high F = 75 |Feb record high F = 77 |Mar record high F = 81 |Apr record high F = 89 |May record high F = 97 |Jun record high F = 102 |Jul record high F = 103 |Aug record high F = 100 |Sep record high F = 99 |Oct record high F = 88 |Nov record high F = 81 |Dec record high F = 76 |year record high F =

|Jan avg record high F = 63.6 |Feb avg record high F = 65.9 |Mar avg record high F = 73.9 |Apr avg record high F = 80.2 |May avg record high F = 87.3 |Jun avg record high F = 94.5 |Jul avg record high F = 97.4 |Aug avg record high F = 95.1 |Sep avg record high F = 91.2 |Oct avg record high F = 82.3 |Nov avg record high F = 72 |Dec avg record high F = 62.7 |year avg record high F = 98.2

|Jan avg record low F = -1.9 |Feb avg record low F = 1.6 |Mar avg record low F = 10.9 |Apr avg record low F = 21.8 |May avg record low F = 31.1 |Jun avg record low F = 42.8 |Jul avg record low F = 51.6 |Aug avg record low F = 48.3 |Sep avg record low F = 34.8 |Oct avg record low F = 19.4 |Nov avg record low F = 7.7 |Dec avg record low F = -0.2 |year avg record low F = -7.7

|Jan record low F = −38 |Feb record low F = −41 |Mar record low F = −31 |Apr record low F = −10 |May record low F = 12 |Jun record low F = 29 |Jul record low F = 36 |Aug record low F = 32 |Sep record low F = 18 |Oct record low F = −8 |Nov record low F = −21 |Dec record low F = −35 |year record low F =

|access-date = August 28, 2022 |access-date = August 28, 2022

Demographics

Fort Collins is the fourth most populous city in Colorado and the 156th most populous city in the United States. The Census Bureau estimates that the city's population was 161,175 in 2015, the population of the Fort Collins-Loveland Metropolitan Statistical Area was 310,487 (151st most populous MSA), and the population of the Front Range Urban Corridor was 4,495,181.

As of the census of 2000, there were 118,652 people, 45,882 households, and 25,785 families residing in the city. The population density was 2,549.3 PD/sqmi. There were 47,755 housing units at an average density of 1,026 /mi2. The racial makeup of the city was 82.4% White, 3.01% Black or African American, 0.6% Native American, 2.48% Asian, 0.12% Pacific Islander, 3.61% from other races, and 2.53% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino residents of any race were 10.79% of the population.

There were 45,882 households, out of which 29% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 44.9% were married couples living together, 7.9% had a female householder with no husband present, and 43.8% were non-families. 26% of all households were made up of individuals, and 5.9% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.45 and the average family size was 3.01.

In the city, the population was spread out, with 21.5% under the age of 18, 22.1% from 18 to 24, 31.5% from 25 to 44, 17% from 45 to 64, and 7.9% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 28 years. For every 100 females, there were 100.9 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 99.7 males.

The median income for a household in the city was $64,459, and the median income for a family was $110,332. Males had a median income of $60,856 versus $48,385 for females. The per capita income for the city was $32,133. About 5.5% of families and 14% of the population were below the poverty line, including 8.3% of those under age 18 and 5.8% of those age 65 or over.

2020 census

Race / ethnicity (NH = Non-Hispanic)Pop. 2000Pop. 2010% 2000% 2010
White alone (NH)101,384119,695130,62085.45%
Black or African American alone (NH)1,1031,5832,2920.93%
Native American or Alaska Native alone (NH)5185717240.44%
Asian alone (NH)2,9094,1616,0382.45%
Pacific Islander alone (NH)1081101370.09%
Some other race alone (NH)1542188330.13%
Mixed race or multi-racial (NH)2,0743,0768,1631.75%
Hispanic or Latino (any race)10,40214,57221,0038.77%
Total118,652143,986169,810100%

Economy

Employment

As of July 2025, Fort Collins had nearly 200,000 employed persons.

Fort Collins hosts federal government employees including some USDA offices. As of 2025, federal agencies based in Fort Collins employed over 5000 people across Colorado, with over 10 federal buildings used as offices.

According to the city's 2020 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, the top employers are:

#Employer# of employees
1Colorado State University7,800
2Poudre Valley Hospital (UCHealth)5,600
3Poudre R-1 School District4,000
4Larimer County2,040
5City of Fort Collins2,030
6Woodward, Inc.1,300
7Broadcom Inc.1,260
8Colorado Department of Agriculture1,120
9King Soopers870
10Otter Products, LLC820

Regional economic development partners include the City of Fort Collins Economic Health Office, Northern Colorado Economic Development Corporation, Small Business Development Center, and Rocky Mountain Innovation Initiative (RMI2).

Major industries and commercial activity

Fort Collins' economy has a mix of manufacturing and service-related businesses. Fort Collins manufacturing includes Woodward Governor, Anheuser-Busch, Walker Mowers, and Otterbox. Many high-tech companies have relocated to Fort Collins because of the resources of Colorado State University and its research facilities. Hewlett-Packard, Intel, AMD, Broadcom, Beckman Coulter, Microsoft, Rubicon Water and Pelco all have offices in Fort Collins. Other industries include clean energy, bioscience, and agri-tech businesses.

Retail

The city's major shopping mall is The Shops at Foothills.

Sustainability programs

FortZED was a zero energy district encompassing the Downtown area of Fort Collins and the main campus of Colorado State University. The district's public-private partnerships employed smart grid and renewable energy technologies to manage the local use and supply of energy. FortZED relied upon energy demand management techniques to encourage use of energy at the most efficient times.

Federal, state, and local funding made the project a reality. The U.S. Department of Energy contributed $6.3 million and the Colorado Department of Local Affairs provided $778,000. Locally, private companies and foundations committed nearly $8 million.

The program ended in 2017 after a majority of its projects had been completed.

Brewing

Fort Collins has over 20 breweries. Notable breweries in the city include Anheuser-Busch, New Belgium Brewing Company, Intersect Brewing and Odell Brewing Company. The local chamber of commerce estimates that in 2010, the industry generated $309.9 million in output, 2,488 jobs and $141.9 million of local payrolls in Larimer County.

Arts and culture

The 2004 Colorado Brewers Festival in Fort Collins
Fort Collins historic district

Much of Fort Collins's culture is centered around the students of Colorado State University. The city provides school year residences for its large college-age population; there is a local music circuit which is influenced by the college town atmosphere and is home to a number of well known microbreweries. The Downtown Business Association hosts a number of small and large festivals each year in the historic Downtown district, including Bohemian Nights at NewWestFest in late summer (permanently discontinued in 2021) which featured local cuisine, music, and businesses. The Fort Collins Lincoln Center is home to the Fort Collins Symphony Orchestra and regularly attracts national touring companies of Broadway plays.

Brewing and cycling figure in local culture. The Colorado Brewer's Festival is held in late June annually in Fort Collins. The festival features beers from as many as 45 brewers from the state of Colorado and averages around 30,000 attendees. New Belgium Brewing Company hosts the Tour de Fat which draws over 20,000 people riding bikes and dressing in costume.

The Colorado Marathon is a yearly event running down the Poudre Canyon and finishing in downtown Fort Collins. The FORTitude 10K run, a partner running event of the Bolder Boulder, is held on Labor Day each year. The Horsetooth Half Marathon has been a fixture of the local running scene since 1973.

The Fort Collins Museum, established in 1941, is a regional center focusing on the culture and history of Fort Collins and the surrounding area. The Fort Collins Museum houses over 30,000 artifacts and features temporary and permanent exhibits, on-going educational programs and events, and is home to four historic structures located in the outdoor Heritage Courtyard.

The arts are represented by The Center for Fine Art Photography, University Center for the Arts, Fort Collins Museum of Art (FCMOA), and the Bas Bleu Theatre Company. The Arts Incubator of the Rockies (AIR), founded in Fort Collins in 2012, was acquired in 2016 by Berea College in Kentucky, where it became part of the College Crafts Program.

Parks and recreation

The city contains 875 acre of developed park areas, which include tennis courts, frisbee golf courses, golf courses, dog parks, baseball diamonds, basketball courts and picnic shelters. There are six community parks: City Park, Edora Park, Fossil Creek Park, Lee Martinez Park, Rolland Moore Park, and Spring Canyon Park. Whitewater Park, and Spring Creek trail, are located alongside the Poudre River. The Gardens on Spring Creek is an 18 acre botanical garden that features themed gardens. Soapstone Prairie Natural Area features the Lindenmeier site, a stratified multi-component archaeological site notable for its Folsom component.

Government

Fort Collins has a council-manager form of government. The mayor, who serves a two-year term and stands for election in municipal elections held in odd-numbered years, presides over a seven-member City Council. The current mayor of Fort Collins is Emily Francis, who was elected to her first term in November 2025. The six remaining council members are elected from districts for staggered four-year terms.

Fort Collins is the largest city in Colorado's 2nd Congressional district, and is represented in Congress by Representative Joe Neguse. On the state level, the city lies in the 14th district of the Colorado Senate, represented by Cathy Kipp and is split between the 52nd and 53rd districts of the Colorado House of Representatives, represented by Yara Zokaie and Andrew Boesenecker, respectively. All three of Fort Collins' state legislators are Democrats. Fort Collins is additionally the county seat of Larimer County, and houses county offices and courts.

Education

Fossil Ridge High School

K–12 public education is provided through Poudre School District (PSD). The district operates and manages the public schools in the city of Fort Collins, as well as in the surrounding towns of Wellington, Timnath, Windsor, Laporte and Livermore. The district is one of the fastest growing in Northern Colorado, adding 400–500 students — about the size of an elementary school — each year. To accommodate growth, the district plans to build three new schools in the next few years.

Poudre School District includes four comprehensive high schools that serve neighborhoods around Fort Collins, including Fort Collins High School, Rocky Mountain High School, Poudre High School, Fossil Ridge High School. The district also operates four alternative high schools: Centennial High School, Polaris School for Expeditionary Learning, Poudre Community Academy and Poudre School District Global Academy, a dual in-person/online school. Additionally, four public charter schools are chartered through PSD, including Ridgeview Classical Schools, and Liberty Common High School, Mountain Sage Community School and Fort Collins Montessori School.

The Poudre School District is also home to ten middle schools (Lesher Middle IB World School, Blevins Middle School, Boltz Middle School, Cache La Poudre Middle School, Kinard Core Knowledge Middle School, Lincoln IB World Middle School, Polaris Expeditionary Learning School, Preston Middle School, Webber Middle School, and Wellington Middle School) and 32 elementary schools.

In addition to PSD schools, several state charter schools serve Fort Collins, including Academy of Arts and Knowledge, Colorado Early Colleges, and Global Village Academy. Private schools include Heritage Christian Academy, Rivendell School, and St. Joseph's Catholic School.

Public libraries

The Poudre River Public Library District operates three branch locations in the city of Fort Collins—Old Town, Harmony, and Council Tree. The Library District was established in 2006 by voter approval, and aims to serve the more than 207,000 people in northern Larimer County, Colorado. The district is governed by a board of volunteer trustees, jointly appointed by the city of Fort Collins and Larimer County.

The library participates in cooperative projects with the local Poudre School District and Colorado State University.

Facilities

The Old Town Library (formerly, the Main Library) is a 43,000 square foot facility that has served the Fort Collins Community since 1976. It is located in the Fort Collins Old Town Historic District at 201 Peterson Street.

The Harmony Library is a 30,000 square foot joint-use facility located on the Front Range Community College campus, at 4616 South Shield Street in Fort Collins. Since its opening in 1998, the facility has served both the Community College (students, faculty, and staff) and the general public.

The Council Tree Library is a nearly 18,000 square foot facility that opened in 2009 in the Front Range Village (a retail commons) and is located at 2733 Council Tree Avenue in Fort Collins. The facility has a unique neighborhood atmosphere with an emphasis on families with young children.

The Webster House Administration Center opened in 2011 and houses the administration, collections, systems administration, maintenance, communications, and outreach staff. The center's opening freed up 3,000 square feet in the Old Town Library, space that is now used for library materials and services.

History

The library as an institution in Fort Collins dates back to the late 19th century, where reading rooms were established in churches or other rented locations. In 1882, for example, a reading room was established in the back of a Presbyterian Church on Whitton Block. The Fort Collins Public Library was officially established in 1900, the sixth public library in the state. The city received $12,500 from philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to build the library, with the condition that it would be maintained as a free public library. It was completed in 1904 at a total cost of approximately $15,000. When the Library opened, there were 2,770 books on hand. In 1937, the Library was awarded a grant from the Work Projects Administration for an annex to the building that would double its space, allowing for the construction of an auditorium/community room that opened in 1939.

As the Fort Collins community grew, so too did the need for more library space. In 1973, the City Council adopted a seven-year master plan which included a new library building. Voters approved a one percent tax increase to fund the plan. The new library building, named the Fort Collins Public Library (now, the Old Town Library), opened in 1976 and remains to this day in Library Park at 201 Peterson Street in Fort Collins.

In 2006, with ongoing city budget cuts impacting library services, residents voted to create and fund a library district with a 62% majority. This initiated a transition period in 2007 of separating the library from the city, for example, transferring finances, staff, and property to the Library District. The library was also given a temporary name, the Fort Collins Regional Library District. An intergovernmental agreement was finally signed in December 2007, that detailed each party's responsibilities during the transfer. In 2009, after asking for ideas from the public, the Poudre River Public Library District was approved as the library's permanent name.

Higher education

The Oval, part of the CSU campus

Colorado State University heads up the choices in higher education. Front Range Community College also maintains a campus in the city, and grants associate's degrees in arts, science, general studies, and applied science. The college offers 17 high school vocational programs and more than 90 continuing education classes.

The Institute of Business & Medical Careers provides professional training in the business and medical professions. The institute's first campus was established in the city in 1987.

Fort Collins has a range of research institutes. Facilities are maintained by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Division of Vector-Borne Diseases, the Center for Advanced Technology and the Colorado Water Resource Research Institute. Other facilities include the Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere, the Institute for Scientific Computing, the U.S. Forest Service Experimental Station, the National Center for Genetic Resources Preservation (NCGRP), and the U.S.D.A. Crops Research Laboratory.

Media

Main article: Media in Fort Collins, Colorado

Infrastructure

Transportation

Air travel

From nearby Northern Colorado Regional Airport, Avelo Airlines served both Burbank (BUR) and Las Vegas (LAS) from October 2021 until June 24, 2022, and June 16, 2022, respectively. Elite Airways resumed commercial air service at the airport on August 27, 2015, providing non-stop flights to the Chicago Rockford International Airport in Illinois. The airline ended service to the airport in 2017. Denver International Airport, which is 70 mi to the south, is served by twenty-three airlines.

The city's former general aviation airport, known as Fort Collins Downtown Airport (3V5), opened in 1966 and closed in 2006.

Streets

Fort Collins' downtown streets form a grid with Interstate 25 running north and south on the east side of the city. Many of the streets are named after the town's founders. U.S. Highway 287 becomes College Avenue inside the city and is the busiest street; It runs north and south, effectively bisecting the city, and serving as the east–west meridian, while Mountain Avenue is the north–south. SH 14 runs concurrent with US 287 at the northern city limit to Jefferson Street, running southeast along Jefferson (later turning into Riverside Avenue), then turning east onto Mulberry Street where it goes east out of the city after an interchange with Interstate 25.

Transit and taxi

Fort Collins also once had a municipally owned trolley service with three branches from the intersection of Mountain and College avenues. The trolley was begun in 1907 by the Denver and Interurban Railroad, which had the intention of connecting the Front Range of Colorado. It was closed in 1951 after ceasing to be profitable. In 1983–84, a portion of the Mountain Avenue line and one of the original trolley cars, Car 21, were restored as a heritage trolley service, under the same name used by the original system, the Fort Collins Municipal Railway. This has been in operation since the end of 1984 on weekends and holidays in the spring and summer, as a tourist and cultural/educational attraction. A second car, number 25, was returned to service on July 4, 2020. A small fee applies to ride.

The city bus system, known as Transfort, operates more than a dozen routes throughout Fort Collins Monday through Saturday, except major holidays.

A Transfort bus

The MAX Bus Rapid Transit is a bus rapid transit that provides service on the Mason Corridor Transitway parallel to College Avenue from Downtown Fort Collins to a transit center just south of Harmony Road. The trip takes approximately 15 minutes from end to end with various stops between. The service began in May 2014. The Mason Corridor and the Mason Express are intended to be the center of future transit-oriented development.

A Transfort MAX bus crossing West Prospect Road

Fort Collins is connected to Loveland, Berthoud, Longmont, and Boulder via the FLEX regional bus route. Greeley-Evans Transit operates a service called the Poudre Express connecting Fort Collins with Windsor and Greeley.

Bustang provides additional intercity transportation for the city. Fort Collins is the northernmost stop on the North Line, which connects southward to Denver. Planning for restoration of regional passenger rail recommenced in earnest in 2017. Fort Collins would be an intermediate stop for the proposed north–south Front Range Passenger Rail corridor between Pueblo and Cheyenne, Wyoming, though it would be the northern terminus of most trips.

Taxi service is provided by Northern Colorado Yellow Cab. Pedicabs are also available from HopON LLC and Dream team Pedicabs.

Railroads

Freight service is provided by Union Pacific and BNSF.

Currently there is no intercity passenger service; the last remaining services connecting the Front Range cities ceased with the formation of Amtrak in 1971. Front Range Passenger Rail is a current proposal to link the cities from Pueblo in the south, north to Fort Collins and possibly to Cheyenne, Wyoming.

The Fort Collins Municipal Railway was a streetcar system from 1919 to 1951, and from 1984 has been partially reinstated as a seasonal Heritage Streetcar service, under the same name.

Cycling

Bicycling is a popular and viable means of transportation in Fort Collins. There are more than 280 mi of designated bikeways in Fort Collins, including on-street designated bike lanes, and the Spring Creek and Poudre River Trails, both paved. There is also a dirt trail, the 5.8 mi Foothills Trail, parallel to Horsetooth Reservoir from Dixon Reservoir north to Campeau Open Space and Michaud Lane.

The Fort Collins Bicycle Library lends bicycles to visitors, students, and residents looking to explore the city of Fort Collins. There are self-guided tours from the "Bike the Sites" collection, including a Brewery Tour, Environmental Learning Tour, and the Historic Tour. The Bike Library is centrally located in the heart of downtown Fort Collins in Old Town Square. The City of Fort Collins also encourages use of alternative transportation, like cycling and using public transit, through FC Moves.

In 2009, the Fort Collins-Loveland metropolitan statistical area (MSA) ranked as the third highest in the United States for percentage of commuters who biked to work (5.6 percent).

In 2013, the League of American Bicyclists designated Fort Collins a Platinum-level Bicycle Friendly Community – one of four in the United States. In 2018, the PeopleForBikes foundation named Fort Collins the no. 1 city in the United States for cycling.

Electric scooters

In early 2019, the City of Fort Collins and Colorado State University (CSU) were preparing regulations for the eventual arrival of electric scooters, in order to avoid the problems other cities have had with these. After a City Council session on Feb 19, the City Government approved scooter regulations, such as specific areas in which scooters must be parked and the observation of dismount zones. in October 2019, The City of Fort Collins and CSU announced a 12-month e-scooter share pilot program partnering with Bird company.

Facilities

  • NIST time signal transmitters WWV and WWVB are near the city
  • Poudre Valley Hospital has helped make Fort Collins into a regional health care center.
  • The National Center for Genetic Resources Preservation (NCGRP) (Human Genome Project)
  • The city is the headquarters of Roosevelt National Forest
One version of a Fort Collins Police Services patrol car
  • Atmospheric Chemistry and Aerosol Laboratory
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: Division of Vector-Borne Diseases
  • USDA Seed Lab Storage
  • Headquarters for SCUBA Schools International (SSI)
  • National Wildlife Research Center
  • USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Western Regional Headquarters
  • Community Foundation of Northern Colorado

Police

The Fort Collins Police Services is headed by Chief Jeffrey Swoboda. it had 214 sworn individuals and 115 civilian personnel.

Notable people

  • Isaac Adamson, writer
  • Wayne Allard, former U.S. senator from Colorado
  • Scott Anderson, racing driver
  • James B. Arthur, pioneer, entrepreneur, mayor, councilman, Colorado state senator
  • John Ashton, actor
  • Carol Berg, fantasy author
  • Biota, music ensemble
  • Mamie Birdwhistle, leader in local African-American community (1920-1943)
  • Jason Blakely, political philosopher
  • Frank Caeti, repertory cast member on sketch comedy series MADtv
  • Allen Bert Christman, cartoonist and American Volunteer Group pilot killed in Rangoon, Burma, during World War II
  • Colin Clark, soccer player who represented the United States national team
  • Georgianna Coff, formerly enslaved domestic worker
  • Jon Cooper, center for NFL's Minnesota Vikings
  • Olivia Cummins, professional cyclist
  • Joy Davidson, opera singer
  • Janay DeLoach, professional track and field athlete and Olympian
  • Rick Dennison, NFL linebacker
  • Jeff Donaldson, NFL defensive back
  • Becca Fitzpatrick, author
  • Lamar Gant, powerlifter
  • Harper Goff, artist, musician, and actor
  • Marco Gonzales, Major League Baseball pitcher for the Seattle Mariners
  • Temple Grandin, author, professor, subject of film Temple Grandin
  • Chad Haga, professional cyclist
  • JD Hammer (born 1994), Major League Baseball pitcher
  • Jon Heder, actor, Napoleon Dynamite
  • Ed Herman, mixed martial artist fighting for the UFC
  • Katie Herzig, folk musician
  • Immortal Dominion, heavy metal band known for soundtrack to Teeth
  • Korey Jones, CFL player
  • Darwood Kaye, actor who portrayed Waldo in the Our Gang short subjects series from 1937 to 1940
  • Makenna Kelly, social media influencer, model, and actress
  • Jake Lloyd, actor, young Anakin Skywalker in 1999's Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace
  • Sonny Lubick, former head football coach at Colorado State University
  • Gavin Mannion, professional cyclist
  • Ross Marquand, actor best known for portraying Aaron in The Walking Dead
  • David Mattingly, science fiction illustrator
  • Hattie McDaniel, first African-American to win an Academy Award (Best Supporting Actress 1939)
  • Darnell McDonald, Major League Baseball player
  • Donzell McDonald, former Major League Baseball player
  • Mark D. Miller, photographer
  • Edward S. Montgomery, journalist
  • Pete Monty, NFL linebacker
  • John Mortvedt, soil scientist and professor emeritus at Colorado State University
  • Blake Neubert, artist
  • Carl B. Olsen, U.S. Coast Guard rear admiral
  • Reid Roberts, soccer player
  • Holmes Rolston III, 2003 Templeton Prize winner
  • Steve Simske, engineer, inventor, scientist
  • Derek Vincent Smith, electronic music artist who performs under name "Pretty Lights"
  • Bill Stevenson, musician (Descendents), record producer, and owner of The Blasting Room Studios
  • Travis Lane Stork, television personality, emergency physician, and author
  • Pat Stryker, billionaire heiress
  • Thomas Sutherland, Colorado State professor and former Beirut hostage
  • Ryan Sutter, bachelor chosen as a groom by Trista Rehn in 2003's The Bachelorette
  • Shane Swartz, boxer
  • Derek Theler, actor in ABC family show Baby Daddy
  • Haeley Vaughn, top 25 finalist of American Idol
  • Byron Raymond White, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court
  • Jason Wingate, composer
  • Ben Woolf, actor
  • Stelth Ulvang, musician, touring member of The Lumineers
  • Audi Y Zentimiento, musician

References

References

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  10. "College Navigator - Colorado State University". National Center for Education Statistics.
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  13. (1990). "Colorado Post Offices 1859–1989". [[Colorado Railroad Museum.
  14. "Fort Collins Time Line 1860". Fort Collins Local History Archive.
  15. "History of Colorado State University".
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  17. "Fort Collins Time Line 1900". Fort Collins Local History Archive.
  18. "Fort Collins Time Line 1930". Fort Collins Local History Archive.
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  21. "Fort Collins Time Line 1880". Fort Collins Local History Archive.
  22. "Fort Collins Time Line 1960". Fort Collins Local History Archive.
  23. "Fort Collins Time Line 1970". Fort Collins Local History Archive.
  24. "Fort Collins Time Line 1980". Fort Collins Local History Archive.
  25. (September–October 1999). "Fort Collins Flood 1997: Comprehensive View of an Extreme Event". American Society of Civil Engineers.
  26. "Fort Collins July 28, 1997". The Weather and Climate Impact Assessment Science Initiative.
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  28. "P004: Hispanic or Latino, and Not Hispanic or Latino by Race – 2000: DEC Summary File 1 – Fort Collins city, Colorado". [[United States Census Bureau]].
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  32. Udasin, Sharon. (2025-09-07). "Trump plan to move USDA spurs brain drain fears".
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  38. (May 15, 2012). "Beer = Economic Prosperity".
  39. (August 12, 2015). "Race Results and History {{!}} Horsetooth Half Marathon".
  40. (August 8, 2016). "Arts Incubator Program Acquired by Berea College, Relocates to Berea, Kentucky".
  41. "Parks in Fort Collins {{!}}{{!}} Parks".
  42. "Parks Map".
  43. Lowenstein, Mark. (2024-10-28). "Spring Creek Trail, Fort Collins".
  44. "Children's Garden: The Gardens on Spring Creek".
  45. "Emily Francis".
  46. (August 3, 2016). "Long Range Facilities Planning {{!}} Poudre School District".
  47. (April 26, 2016). "PSD board approves plan to build schools".
  48. "Who are AAK Dragons?".
  49. "Home".
  50. "Rivendell School – Individualized Academic Education".
  51. Poudre River Public Library District. "About Us".
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  56. "Guide to Healthcare Schools and Degrees".
  57. (April 14, 2021). "Division of Vector-Borne Diseases (DVBD) {{!}} Division of Vector-Borne Diseases {{!}} NCEZID {{!}} CDC".
  58. (October 13, 2021). "Avelo Airlines Goes 'ALL IN' with New Nonstop Service Between Las Vegas and Northern Colorado".
  59. (May 27, 2022). "Avelo Airlines Notifies Northern Colorado Regional Airport About Upcoming Service Suspension".
  60. "Rockford airport to serve Denver, New York City areas - WREX.com – Rockford's News Leader".
  61. "Low-cost air carrier Avelo Airlines plans service from Loveland to LA". Coloradoan.com.
  62. (December 11, 2009). "Valley Airport / Fort Collins Airpark / Fort Collins Downtown Airport (3V5)". [[Abandoned & Little-Known Airfields]].
  63. "Street Names Recall Early History: News Flashbacks: Fort Collins History Connection".
  64. "Fort Collins Municipal Railway – History".
  65. Long, Raphael P. (April 1986). "Fort Collins Municipal Railway: Then and Now". ''[[Pacific RailNews]]'', pp. 16–20. Glendale, CA: [[Interurban Press]]. {{ISSN. 8750-8486.
  66. "After nearly 70 years, Fort Collins sees second restored streetcar on the tracks".
  67. (May 9, 2014). "$87 million MAX project ready to roll in Fort Collins".
  68. "A Vision for Front Range Passenger Rail". Colorado Department of Transportation.
  69. "Front Range Corridor".
  70. "IIS7".
  71. (April 13, 2021). "Amtrak hopes to reduce I-25 traffic by creating a passenger rail along the Front Range". KKTV 11 News.
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  73. (September 2011). "Commuting in the United States: 2009".
  74. (June 6, 2013). "New Platinum City in Latest Round of Bicycle Friendly Communities!".
  75. (May 23, 2018). "Fort Collins named No. 1 city for bikes".
  76. Trowbridge, Julia. "Fort Collins, CSU prepares for electric scooters".
  77. Ye, Samantha. "City Council approves scooter regulations".
  78. "Electric Scooters {{!}}{{!}} Electric Scooters".
  79. Powell, Rebecca. "Bird scooters to launch in Fort Collins on Oct. 23".
  80. (March 2010). "NIST Radio Station WWVB". NIST.
  81. "Police Services {{!}}{{!}} Police Services".
  82. "New Fort Collins Police Chief".
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  84. "James Arthur Website".
  85. "Colin Clark".
  86. (January 14, 2025). "NEWS: Earthquakes Sign MLS First-Round SuperDraft Selection Reid Roberts".
  87. Corrinson, Michele. (July 11, 2012). "Baby Daddy: Derek Theler Talks About His New Hit Show". College Magazine.
  88. (March 5, 2010). "Jason Wingate {{!}} Classical Composers Database".
  89. "Local History Archive Larimer Legends – Old Town & Disneyland – City of Fort Collins, Colorado". Library.ci.fort-collins.co.us.
  90. Iovine, Julie V.. (October 15, 1998). "A Tale Of Two Main Streets; The towns that inspired Disney are searching for a little magic of their own.". The New York Times.
  91. (October 15, 2009). "6-year-old Colorado boy found alive in attic after balloon lands". [[CNN]].
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