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Grand Junction, Colorado

City in and seat of Mesa County, Colorado, USA


City in and seat of Mesa County, Colorado, USA

FieldValue
nameGrand Junction, Colorado
settlement_typeHome rule municipality
image_skylineGrand-junction-skyline.jpg
image_captionGrand Junction skyline
image_mapMesa County Colorado Incorporated and Unincorporated areas Grand Junction Highlighted 0831660.svg
map_captionLocation of Grand Junction in Mesa County, Colorado
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameUnited States
subdivision_type1State
subdivision_name1Colorado
subdivision_type2County
subdivision_name2Mesa
government_typeCouncil-Manager
leader_titleMayor
leader_nameCody Kennedy
leader_title1City Manager
leader_name1Mike Bennett
established_title
established_title2Incorporated
established_date2July 22, 1882
established_title3
named_forConfluence of Grand River and Gunnison River
unit_prefUS
total_typeTotal
area_footnotes
area_total_km2103.799
area_land_km2102.652
area_water_km21.147
population_as_of2020
population_footnotes
population_total65,560
population_density_sq_mi1,654
population_est71780
pop_est_as_of2025
population_metro155,703
timezone1MST
utc_offset1−07:00
timezone1_DSTMDT
utc_offset1_DST−06:00
coordinates
elevation_footnotes
elevation_ft4646
postal_code_typeZIP Codes
postal_code81501–81507
area_codes970/748
blank_nameFIPS code
blank_info08-31660
blank1_nameGNIS feature ID
blank1_info2410631
blank3_nameMajor highways
blank3_info[[File:I-70.svg24pxlink=Interstate 70 in Colorado]] [[File:US_6.svg24pxlink=U.S. Route 6 in Colorado]] [[File:US_50.svg24pxlink=U.S. Route 50 in Colorado]] [[File:Colorado_141.svg24pxlink=Colorado State Highway 141]] [[File:Colorado_340.svg24pxlink=Colorado State Highway 340]]
website
population_rank17th in Colorado
nicknamesColorado Wine Country, River City

Grand Junction is a home rule municipality that is the county seat of and the largest city in Mesa County, Colorado, United States. Grand Junction's population was 65,560 at the 2020 United States census, making it the most populous city in western Colorado and the 17th most populous Colorado municipality overall.

As western Colorado's largest city, Grand Junction is the economic and cultural center of the Western Slope region. The city is a transportation hub, situated at the convergence of Interstate 70, U.S. Highway 50 and U.S. Highway 6. Grand Junction is also home to Colorado Mesa University, enrolling nearly 10,000 students annually.

The city is the anchor of the Grand Junction metropolitan area, home to over 150,000 residents as of 2020. It is located in the heart of the Grand Valley, a large Colorado River valley stretching over 30 miles east-to-west and 5 miles north-to-south. Grand Junction comprises the largest urban center between Denver and Salt Lake City, as well as the most densely populated area and the only metropolitan area in Colorado outside of the Front Range Urban Corridor.

Description

Grand Junction is 247 mi west-southwest of the Colorado State Capitol in Denver. The city has a council–manager form of government. It is a major commercial and transportation hub within the large area between the Green River and the Continental Divide, and the largest city in Colorado outside of the Front Range Corridor.

The city is along the Colorado River, at its confluence with the Gunnison River, which comes in from the south. "Grand" refers to the historical Grand River, renamed the Upper Colorado River in 1921. "Junction" refers to the confluence of the Colorado and Gunnison rivers. Grand Junction has been nicknamed "River City". It is near the midpoint of a 30 mi arcing valley, known as the Grand Valley; since the late 19th century it has been a major fruit-growing region. The valley was long occupied by the Ute people and earlier indigenous cultures. It was not settled by European-American farmers until the 1880s. Since the late 20th century, several wineries have been established in the area.

The Colorado National Monument, a unique series of canyons and mesas, overlooks the city on the west. Most of the area is surrounded by federal public lands managed by the US Bureau of Land Management. Interstate 70 connects the city eastward to Glenwood Springs and Denver and westward to Green River, Utah; Salt Lake City is reached to the west via Interstate 70 and U.S Route 6; and Las Vegas (via Interstate 70 and Interstate 15).

History

In September 1881, the former Ute Indian Territory was abolished and the Utes were forced into a reservation so that the U.S. government could open the area to settlers. Clinton County, Pennsylvania-born George Addison Crawford (1827–91) soon purchased a plot of land. On July 22, 1882, he incorporated the town of Grand Junction and planted Colorado's first vineyard near Palisade, Colorado, causing the area to become known as the Colorado Wine Country. Grand Junction also has a storied past with gunfighters, miners, and early settlers of the American Southwest. Prior to its incorporation as the city of Grand Junction, the community was known as Ute, and was also briefly called West Denver.

The narrow gauge Denver and Rio Grande Railroad reached Grand Junction from the southeast, from Pueblo via Gunnison in 1882, followed in 1890 by the standard gauge Rio Grande Junction Railway from the northeast, from New Castle (jointly owned by the D&RG and the Colorado Midland). These greatly contributed to the expansion and settlement of the area.

Geography

At the 2020 United States census, the city had a total area of 103.799 km2 (40.077 sq mi) including 1.147 km2 (.443 sq mi) of water.

Climate

Grand Junction has a cold semi-arid climate (Köppen: BSk). It sits in a large area of high desert lands in Western Colorado. Winters are cold and dry, with a January mean temperature of 27.4 °F. Due to its location west of the Rockies, Grand Junction does not receive as much influence from the Chinook winds as locations in Colorado east of the Front Range, yet it does receive protection from the Arctic air masses that can settle to the east of the Rockies. This is illustrated by the fact that from December to February, highs reach 50 °F only 18 days.

|Jan record high F = 62 |Feb record high F = 71 |Mar record high F = 81 |Apr record high F = 89 |May record high F = 101 |Jun record high F = 105 |Jul record high F = 107 |Aug record high F = 103 |Sep record high F = 102 |Oct record high F = 88 |Nov record high F = 76 |Dec record high F = 66

|Jan avg record high F = 49.6 |Feb avg record high F = 60.0 |Mar avg record high F = 72.6 |Apr avg record high F = 81.3 |May avg record high F = 90.9 |Jun avg record high F = 99.4 |Jul avg record high F = 102.0 |Aug avg record high F = 98.6 |Sep avg record high F = 93.2 |Oct avg record high F = 82.1 |Nov avg record high F = 65.3 |Dec avg record high F = 51.9 |year avg record high F = 102.5

|Jan avg record low F = 3.4 |Feb avg record low F = 10.3 |Mar avg record low F = 19.3 |Apr avg record low F = 25.4 |May avg record low F = 33.6 |Jun avg record low F = 44.3 |Jul avg record low F = 54.3 |Aug avg record low F = 53.5 |Sep avg record low F = 39.2 |Oct avg record low F = 25.4 |Nov avg record low F = 13.8 |Dec avg record low F = 2.8 |year avg record low F = -1.3

|Jan record low F = −23 |Feb record low F = −21 |Mar record low F = 5 |Apr record low F = 11 |May record low F = 24 |Jun record low F = 34 |Jul record low F = 44 |Aug record low F = 43 |Sep record low F = 28 |Oct record low F = 6 |Nov record low F = −4 |Dec record low F = −21

Demographics

Grand Junction is the principal city of the Grand Junction, CO Metropolitan Statistical Area.

As of the census of 2000, there were 41,986 people, 17,865 households, and 10,540 families residing in the city. The population density was 1,362.6 PD/sqmi. There were 18,784 housing units at an average density of 609.6 /sqmi. The racial makeup of the city was 91.78% White, 0.60% African American, 0.94% Native American, 0.76% Asian, 0.12% Pacific Islander, 3.81% from other races, and 1.99% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino residents of any race were 10.86% of the population.

There were 17,865 households, out of which 25.5% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 46.1% were married couples living together, 9.4% had a female householder with no husband present, and 41.0% were non-families. Of all households 33.2% were made up of individuals, and 13.8% had one living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.23 and the average family size was 2.84.

In the city, 21.2% of the population was under the age of 18, 11.9% was from 18 to 24, 26.3% from 25 to 44, 22.8% from 45 to 64, and 17.9% was 65 years of age or older. The median age was 39 years. For every 100 females, there were 95.1 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 92.6 males.

The population figures are for Grand Junction only; the city abuts smaller towns and unincorporated county areas which contribute to area commerce.

The median income for a household in the city was $33,152, and the median income for a family was $43,851. Males had a median income of $31,685 versus $22,804 for females. The per capita income for the city was $19,692. About 7.5% of families and 11.9% of the population were below the poverty line, including 11.8% of those under age 18 and 9.0% of those age 65 or over.

Economy

Economic history

From the time settlers arrived in the 1880s until the 1960s, three of the main economic activities in the region were farming, fruit growing, and cattle raising. Fruit orchards, particularly between Grand Junction and Palisade to the east, remain important to the region's reputation and economy to the present day. Fruits most often grown are peaches, pears, apricots, plums, cherries, and, particularly since the 1980s, grapes for wine. In this semi-arid environment, these orchards thrive from a combination of abundant sunshine and irrigation from a system of canals that divert water from the Colorado River.

Attempts were made to establish sugar beet farming and beet sugar production. The Grand Valley Sugar Company established a campaign in 1893, sending three train carloads to the Utah-Idaho Sugar Company. Several tariffs and subsidies to domestic sugar were established in the 1890s, which led to uncertainty in the market. After the 1897 Dingley Act, the company was revived in 1898 and rallied to build a sugar factory. They failed to fundraise to build the plant. At the same time, Charles N. Cox was able to organize an effort to establish a factory in 1898 as well. John F. Campion and others including James Joseph Brown, Eben Smith, Charles E. Mitchell, George Trimble, James R. McKinnie, and Charles Boettcher invested, creating the Colorado Sugar Manufacturing Company in 1899 and contracting E. H. Dyer to build a factory. The failed to succeed, so they sold the plant to local investors, who were able to make it a success. The Campion-Boettcher group then created the Great Western Sugar Company.

Grand Junction was home to the Climax Uranium Mill, a now decommissioned mill that provided uranium ore to the US Atomic Energy Commission. It produced 2.2 million tons of uranium tailings a by product of uranium mining which can be unsafe. For decades, Grand Junction residents were able to collect as much of the fine radioactive gray sand as they wanted for free. It was used as construction material all over town.

Education and healthcare have been important to the economy of the area, especially since the 1950s, with the rise of Colorado Mesa University and St. Mary's Hospital as leading employers in these fields.

Vast oil shale reserves were known to exist near Parachute, Colorado in the Piceance Basin. The oil embargoes of the 1970s and high gas prices resulted in major financial interest in the region. Exxon purchased rights and used Grand Junction as its seat of operations. The city and the surrounding Grand Valley became prosperous in the 1970s and early 1980s largely because of the effects of oil shale development. The United States, western Colorado in particular, has the largest-known concentration of oil shale in the world (according to the Bureau of Land Management) and holds an estimated 800 gigabarrels of recoverable oil, enough to meet U.S. demand for oil at current levels for 110 years. Known as the "Rock That Burns", the shale can be mined and processed to produce oil. In the past it was significantly more expensive than conventional oil. Sustained prices above $95 per barrel, however, may make extraction economically attractive in the coming years (see Oil shale economics). ExxonMobil pulled out of the region because of lower oil prices, which led to economic hardship in the region.

The economic bust, known as "Black Sunday" (May 2, 1982) to the locals, started with a phone call from the president of Exxon to Governor Richard Douglas Lamm, stating that Exxon would cut its losses while retaining mining rights to the (then and currently) uneconomic oil. The economic bust was felt statewide, as Exxon had invested more than 5 billion in the state. Colorado historian Tom Noel observed, "I think that was a definite turning point, and it was a reminder that we were a boom-and-bust state ... There were parallels to the silver crash of 1893."

By 2008, the economy of Grand Junction appeared to be more diverse and stable than it had been in previous decades. Major contributors to the economy were health care, tourism, agriculture, livestock, and energy mining (gas and oil). Major energy companies had once again invested large amounts of money due to increases in oil and natural gas prices (such as in the years 2005–2008). However, a major drop (in the summer of 2008) of market natural gas prices led to reduced gas well drilling and related capital expenditures in the area, significantly slowing the Grand Junction economy in 2009. Reports given in 2009 suggested that Grand Junction had once again been hard-hit economically, with one report by April 2010 listing the area as having had the largest percentage drop in employment of any "small city" in the entire United States.

By 2008, Grand Junction was being discovered by the "nation's elite business and leisure travelers" as a destination for private jet travel, with nearby Powderhorn Resort and other ski resorts a major attraction.

Top employers

According to the city's 2024 Annual Comprehensive Financial Report, Grand Junction's top employers are:

#EmployerNumber of employees
1Mesa County Valley School District 513,465
2St. Mary's Regional Hospital2,846
3Community Hospital1,400
4Mesa County1,271
5Colorado Mesa University1,173
6Grand Junction VA Medical Center1,022
7City of Grand Junction860
8Family West Health616
9West Star Aviation559
10HopeWest350

Sports

Grand Junction's Colorado National Monument was home to a stage in the Coors Classic bicycle race known as "The Tour of the Moon" due to the Monument's unique landscape.

Since 1958, the JUCO World Series has been played at Suplizio Field. The city also has a professional Minor League Baseball team, the Grand Junction Jackalopes, who play in the Pioneer Baseball League. The Jackalopes were formerly known as the Grand Junction Rockies and were a minor league affiliate of the Colorado Rockies, but became independent in 2020.

Both Suplizio Field and Stocker Stadium also host Colorado Mesa University as well as School District 51 sporting events.

Parks and recreation

The Grand Junction area has developed as a mountain biking destination, with many bikers coming from the Front Range of Colorado, the Salt Lake City area, and as far away as California to enjoy the area's abundant single-track trails. Two prominent trails are the Tabeguache and Kokopelli trails, the latter running from near Loma to Moab, Utah. Fruita, Colorado, with its 18-Road trail system, is within 10 miles of the city and has become a major mountain biking destination.

Education

Museum of Western Colorado Sterling T. Smith Educational Tower

K–12

The Mesa Valley School District No. 51 provides comprehensive K–12 public education to the Grand Junction area. School District 51 operates five high schools:

  • Fruita Monument High School
  • Grand Junction High School
  • Central High School
  • Palisade High School
  • R-5 High School

In addition, the district operates numerous middle, elementary, and other types of schools, including East Middle School, Redlands Middle School, and West Middle School. District 51 partners with CMU Tech to operate the Mesa County Career Center, a vocational school owned and operated by Colorado Mesa University. CMU Tech was formerly named Western Colorado Community College.

Colleges and universities

Grand Junction is home to two higher education institutions:

  • Colorado Mesa University, a public university serving nearly 10,000 students. CMU is the largest university in western Colorado.
    • Colorado Mesa University also operates CMU Tech which specializes in vocational education, offering professional certificates and Associate of Applied Science degrees
  • IntelliTec College, a private for-profit technical college offering professional and vocational certificates.

Media

Main article: Media in Grand Junction, Colorado

Radio

The Grand Junction radio market includes all of Mesa County, Colorado. Six AM radio stations and more than 25 FM stations are licensed to broadcast from the city.

Newspapers

Grand Junction is serviced by one local newspaper, the Grand Junction Daily Sentinel. The Grand Junction area also receives newspaper influence from sources in the greater Denver front range area.

Television

Grand Junction has ABC, NBC, and CBS television station affiliates under the call signs of KJCT-TV (Channel 8), KKCO-TV (Channel 11), and KREX-TV (Channel 5), respectively. Also, Grand Junction has a Fox (Channel 4) affiliate station under the call sign of KFQX that receives news from the Denver FOX affiliate, KDVR (Channel 31) at 9 pm. KLML (Channel 20) broadcasts Cozi TV programming. KRMJ (Channel 18) is the local PBS affiliate, part of the statewide Rocky Mountain PBS network.

Infrastructure

Transportation

Amtrak station

Grand Junction Regional Airport (formerly Walker Field Airport) serves as the major airport in the area. It is the largest airport in western Colorado, and the third-largest in the state, behind Denver International Airport and the Colorado Springs Airport. As of 2025, the Grand Junction Regional Airport offers direct flights to Denver, Dallas–Fort Worth, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Salt Lake City, Phoenix, San Francisco, and Santa Ana, as well as one-stop flights to Provo, Utah. In January 2025, the airport began offering one-stop direct flights to Hartford, Connecticut, with a stop in Las Vegas.

Railroad freight service is provided by Union Pacific, with BNSF trackage rights. Amtrak, the national passenger rail system, provides service to Grand Junction Station, operating its California Zephyr daily on the UP trackage in both directions between Chicago and Emeryville, California, across the bay from San Francisco.

Bustang, Colorado's state-run bus system, provides intercity bus service to the city. There are two bus lines that include Grand Junction. The West line connects to Denver, while the Outrider line connects to Durango. Both of these have multiple stops between the final destinations, and the West line has options to transfer to alternative lines.

Grand Valley Transit (GVT) is a regional transit system serving the Grand Valley. It operates 11 bus routes in the area as well as a "dial-a-ride" service.

The city also offers a shared micromobility program that was launched in May 2023. The city has allowed the companies Bird and Lime to rent out the e-scooters via their respective mobile apps.

Grand Junction has a growing network of mixed-use pedestrian and bicycle trails. The riverfront trail system, which runs next to Colorado River, extends from Loma to Palisade, with missing sections between Las Colonias Park and 29 Rd, and 33 1/2 Rd to 36 1/4 Rd. The monument trail provides a connection from the riverfront trail and the downtown core to the Lunch Loops. In 2023, the city council passed the pedestrian and bicycle plan, a visionary document to promote better connectivity. In the same year, the city passed a revised Transportation and Engineering Design Standards (TEDS) to provide clearer guidelines for the development of new bicycle and pedestrian infrastructure. In 2024, the city was awarded a silver designation by the League of American Bicyclists.

Major highways

  • [[Image:I-70.svg|25px]] Interstate 70 runs from Interstate 15 in Cove Fort, Utah to Baltimore, Maryland, connecting Grand Junction to Denver, Kansas City, St. Louis, Indianapolis, and Columbus. Via Interstate 15, it connects Grand Junction with Las Vegas, Nevada, and southern California.
  • [[Image:US 6.svg|25px]] U.S. Highway 6 serves 14 states, running east–west from Provincetown, Massachusetts, to Bishop, California. In Colorado, it generally runs parallel to Interstate 76 and Interstate 70.
  • [[Image:US 50.svg|25px]] U.S. Highway 50 crosses 12 states, linking Ocean City, Maryland, with Sacramento, California. In Colorado, U.S. 50 connects Grand Junction with Montrose, Gunnison, and Pueblo, and to the west, it travels into the state of Utah.
  • [[Image:Colorado 340.svg|25px]] SH 340 runs east–west, starting at First Street in downtown Grand Junction, traversing the Redlands and ending at 'U.S. Highway 6 and U.S. Highway 50 in Fruita.

Notable people

  • Owen Aspinall, former governor of American Samoa
  • Sabré Cook, racing driver
  • Ross Davis, racing driver
  • Charles L. Fletcher, architect and interior designer
  • Ben Garland, NFL player
  • Chuck Hull, inventor
  • Jeff Hurd, U.S. representative
  • Vance Johnson, former NFL wide receiver
  • Aryn Kyle, author
  • Kathryn Mientka, pianist, director of the Western Slope Chamber Music Series
  • Tyme Mientka, cellist, director of the Western Slope Chamber Music Series
  • Annabelle Craft Moss, aviator who received Congressional Gold Medal; served in World War II with Women Airforce Service Pilots
  • Bill Musgrave, former NFL player and coach
  • Rick Schroder, actor and film director
  • Elmo Smith, former governor of Oregon
  • Michael Strobl, U.S. Marine, subject of a 2009 film, Taking Chance
  • Dalton Trumbo, screenwriter
  • Walter Walker, political leader and publisher
  • Dean Withers, live streamer and political commentator

Sister city

Grand Junction has a sister city, as designated by Sister Cities International:

  • El Salvador El Espino (Jucuarán), Usulután Department, El Salvador

Explanatory notes

References

References

  1. "Active Colorado Municipalities". [[Colorado Department of Local Affairs]].
  2. (May 7, 2025). "Grand Junction City Council elects new mayor".
  3. "City Manager {{!}} Grand Junction, CO". City of Grand Junction, Colorado.
  4. (December 1, 2004). "Colorado Municipal Incorporations". [[Colorado.
  5. (August 12, 2021). "Decennial Census P.L. 94-171 Redistricting Data". [[United States Census Bureau]], [[United States Department of Commerce]].
  6. "ZIP Code Lookup". [[United States Postal Service]].
  7. {{GNIS. 2410631
  8. "Colorado Mesa University Campus Profile".
  9. "Find a County". National Association of Counties.
  10. Blackmar, Frank Wilson. (March 1, 1912). "Kansas: A Cyclopedia of State History, Embracing Events, Institutions, Industries, Counties, Cities, Towns, Prominent Persons, Etc. ... with a Supplementary Volume Devoted to Selected Personal History and Reminiscence". Standard publishing Company.
  11. [[Lucius Beebe. Beebe, Lucius]] and [[Charles Clegg. Clegg, Charles]], ''Rio Grande, Mainline of the Rockies'', Howell-North Books 1962.
  12. "Climatological Normals of Grand Junction". [[Hong Kong Observatory]].
  13. "NowData – NOAA Online Weather Data". [[National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration]].
  14. "U.S. Climate Normals Quick Access". National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
  15. "US Census Bureau City and Town Population Totals: 2020-2024". United States Census Bureau.
  16. "U.S. Census website". [[United States Census Bureau]].
  17. Eric Twitty. (August 2003). "Silver Wedge: The Sugar Beet Industry in Fort Collins". SWCA Environmental Consultants.
  18. (29 December 2020). "Grand Junction keeps its grave for radioactive, Cold War dirt thanks to new coronavirus-aid package". The Colorado Sun.
  19. (April 23, 1970). "AEC Playground in the Rockies Is in Colorado". Colorado Springs Gazette.
  20. Richard Williamson. (October 5, 1999). "Oil shale collapse preserved scenic vistas". Denver Rocky Mountain News.
  21. The Adams Group, [http://www.coloradoeconomy.com/news.html Coloradoeconomy.com, "Today's Economy"] {{webarchive. link. (May 11, 2008 . April 23, 2010. Retrieved December 5, 2010)
  22. [http://denver.bizjournals.com/denver/stories/2008/01/07/daily57.html "Colo. gets two spots on luxury-travel list"]. ''Denver Business Journal''. January 11, 2008. Retrieved January 12, 2008
  23. "City of Grand Junction ACFR".
  24. "Alpine Bank NJCAA Division I JUCO World Series".
  25. "Home". Mesa County Valley School District 51.
  26. "2012 Arbitron Radio Metro Map". [[Arbitron]].
  27. "AMQ AM Radio Database Query". [[Federal Communications Commission]].
  28. "Radio Stations in Grand Junction, Colorado". Radio-Locator.
  29. "Airlines Serving GJT".
  30. STAFF, SENTINEL. (2024-07-10). "Breeze Airways announces new flight from Grand Junction to Las Vegas".
  31. (2025-01-07). "Breeze Airways' inaugural flight to Vegas starts Thursday". WesternSlopeNow.com.
  32. "Shared Micromobility Pilot".
  33. "Grand Junction Bicycle Map".
  34. "One Riverfront".
  35. "2023 Pedestrian and Bicycle Plan".
  36. "TEDS Manual".
  37. "2024 League of American Bicyclists Report Card for Grand Junction".
  38. Toomer, Lindsey. (2024-12-27). "Jeff Hurd, representing Boebert's former district, to bring new style to shared priorities".
  39. "Public Radio".
  40. (July 8, 2019). "Grand Junction, Colorado Wins Sister Cities International's Innovation Award for Professional and Technical Assistance".
  41. "Anna Stout".
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