Architectural Highlights

Featuring the best landmarks around La Junta

Explore the iconic buildings in downtown La Junta to historic homes in our neighborhoods.

Featured on the Food Network’s Feasting on Asphalt, the Copper Kitchen is famed among locals and visitors alike. The restaurant is located in the Central Block Building – a two-story sandstone and red brick structure completed in 1890. When it was complete the Central Block Building was part of the first modern business block erected in the city of La Junta.

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Rent a Bike at the Otero County Courthouse

After a filling breakfast at the Copper Kitchen, your architecture tour begins. For the next part of the tour, you can drive or walk. However, biking may be the best option for this tour. One block south of the Copper Kitchen, near the Otero County Courthouse, you can rent a bike by the minute, by the hour, or for the entire day.

 
 

Downtown La Junta

Post Office Building

Built in 1915, the La Junta Post Office is located at 324 Colorado Avenue.

Masonic Lodge Architecture

Built in 1926, the Masonic Lodge Temple building is located at Fourth Street and Santa Fe Avenue.

Fox Theater

Built in 1912, the Fox Theater building is located at 11 East 3rd Street.

Just a few minutes from downtown La Junta, between 5th and 6th Street and San Juan avenue, you can find  seven well-preserved Queen Anne style residences within the San Juan Avenue Historic District. These homes were constructed between 1896 and 1905, as the town recovered from an economic depression.

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Dr. Finney House and Historic Homes on Belleview and Carson Avenues

From the San Juan Avenue Historic District, head one block up to 608 Belleview. On this street, you will discover Dr. Frank Finney’s 1899 house. The home exhibits the most lavishly detailed exterior in this Plains community. The house with its rich interior trim is La Junta’s best example of Colonial Revival architecture.  Architect Walter Dubree designed the residence. 

Traveling south on Belleview Avenue towards 10th Street, you can view some of La Junta’s oldest historic homes, a carriage stepping stone, and a tree-lined avenue.

One block west of Belleview at 619 Carson, stop by to see the Eugen Rouke House. Eugene Rourke, prominent settler, rancher and businessman in the La Junta area, had this house constructed for his family in 1898. The residence exhibits the architectural transition between late Victorian eclecticism and the Colonial Revival style.  Interesting features include the original two-story Colonial Revival portico, and the Queen Anne style tower and iron roof cresting.

La Junta City Park

Though land for the La Junta City Park was donated in 1905, the park as it exists today is primarily the work of the CWA and WPA, which carried out a series of improvement projects in the park from 1933 to 1941. The focus of the CWA project was improving drainage in the park. The WPA carried out a more extensive rebuilding and landscaping of the park which included laying drives, planting trees, building the lake, and constructing rustic stone walls and buildings.

Otero College Campus

In 1939, the residents of the La Junta School District Number 11 voted that bonds be used to partially finance a junior college building to be administered by the Board of Education. On September 15, 1941, “La Junta Junior College” opened its doors to the first class.

MacDonald Hall, the first building constructed for the college, remains a featured building on the 40-acre college campus.

The campus is a popular place for photography, dog walking, and community gatherings. Enjoy the campus as the locals do and take time to enjoy the beautiful landscaping, outdoor art, and architecture of the buildings spread throughout the campus. 

The Koshare Museum is home to the world’s largest self-supported log ceiling, but there is more to museum than just its architecture. Visitors are often blown away by the Native American and Western collection within the museum. 

The collection features original art from the founding artists of the Taos and Santa Fe Art Colonies.   Native American artifacts from the people of the Southwest, the Plains, and Anasazi.  The museum contains large collections from Enesto Zepeda, Joseph Imhof, and Velino Herrera.

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