Otto Bulow
Appearance
Otto Bulow was an architect from Sweden who worked in Pueblo, Colorado. He designed the Colorado Mineral Palace.[1][2]
The Daily Chieftan listed him among a party visiting Manitou Springs, Colorado in May 1890.[3] In 1887, he had a contract to supply 50,000 railroad ties to the Denver and Rio Grande Railway.[4]
Works
- Colorado Mineral Palace[5][6] in Pueblo's Mineral Palace Park. Built in 1889,[7] razed in 1942 but photographs remain and the El Pueblo Museum has a model of it[8]
- 220 W. 3rd St.
- Tooke-Nuckolls House (1891) at 38 Carlile Place, NRHP listed
- Botanical and Horticultural Laboratory (1890) at Colorado Agricultural College in Fort Collins, NRHP listed[1][9]
- Beaumont Hotel (Ouray, Colorado) (1887) NRHP listed[10]
References
- ^ a b PULP, The (October 19, 2015). "This was once a palace of minerals". Medium.
- ^ Severance, Ryan. "Pueblo's sequicentennial: Mineral Palace was a Pueblo gem". The Pueblo Chieftain.
- ^ "The Colorado Daily Chieftain May 21, 1890 — Colorado Historic Newspapers Collection". www.coloradohistoricnewspapers.org.
- ^ "News". The Solid Muldoon. 29 July 1887.
- ^ "Ohio History". June 26, 1958 – via Google Books.
- ^ Ochs, Milton Barlow (June 26, 1890). "The Heart of the Rockies: Illustrated, as Reached by the Pike's Peak Route, the New Standard Gauge Line from Denver, Colorado Springs and Pueblo to Manitou, Cascade ... and All Sections of the Pacific Coast". Passenger Department of the Colorado Midland Railway – via Google Books.
- ^ Everett, Derek (16 March 2020). Colorado Day by Day. University Press of Colorado. ISBN 978-1-64642-007-0.
- ^ "Mineral Palace Park". SAH ARCHIPEDIA. July 16, 2018.
- ^ Noel, Thomas Jacob (2006). Guide to Colorado Historic Places: Sites Supported by the Colorado Historical Society's State Historical Fund. Big Earth Publishing. ISBN 978-1-56579-493-1.
- ^ "Otto Bulow". SAH ARCHIPEDIA.