Old Town Erie
Erie, CO
The authentic heart of Erie — coal-mining-era brick buildings along Briggs Street reimagined as farm-to-table restaurants and boutiques, Coal Creek Park in the backyard, the annual Hot Air Balloon Festival overhead, and the small-town character that everything built around it is trying to recreate.
- Zip Code80516
- Home StylesCraftsman, Victorian, Ranch, Bungalow
- Year Built1880s–1970s (established)
- Price Range$450K – $750K
- HOANone on most properties
- School DistrictSt. Vrain Valley School District
- Key DrawHistoric Briggs Street · Coal Creek Park
- LocationCentral Erie · Downtown core
Where Erie Began
Old Town Erie is the original Erie — the neighborhood that grew up around coal mining and the railroad beginning in the 1870s, when the town was formally incorporated on November 16, 1874, named for the founder’s birthplace in Erie, Pennsylvania. The brick buildings lining Briggs Street have stood for more than a century, originally housing saloons, boarding houses, and frontier mercantile shops that served the miners who extracted coal from the seams beneath the surrounding prairie. That coal-mining heritage is reflected in the name of Erie’s most prominent new master-planned community nearby — Colliers Hill, with “collier” meaning coal miner — a deliberate acknowledgment that the town’s roots matter.
What began as a frontier mining settlement has been reimagined as one of the most charming small-town downtowns in the northern Denver metro corridor. The historic brick buildings along Briggs Street now house farm-to-table restaurants, boutique shops, art studios, and breweries. 24 Carrot Bistro — Erie’s most acclaimed restaurant, a farm-to-table American kitchen with a bar set against wooden bookshelves — has become a genuine destination that draws diners from Boulder, Longmont, and Broomfield who seek it out specifically. Stem Ciders & Acreage, with its sprawling outdoor patio, has become the gathering spot for Erie’s warm-weather social life. The result is a downtown that feels genuinely earned rather than manufactured — real character that built up over 150 years of actual use.
The residential neighborhoods surrounding downtown Old Town Erie are established in a way that Erie’s newer master-planned communities simply aren’t yet. Mature trees shade streets of craftsman bungalows, ranch homes, and Victorian-influenced houses on lots that have been landscaped and tended across decades. These are homes with history — updated kitchens behind original trim, original hardwood floors, porches designed for actual sitting rather than curb appeal photography. The trade-off is that they’re older and often smaller than new construction — but the character they carry is irreplaceable, and many buyers specifically seek Old Town’s authenticity after touring Erie’s newer communities.
The Erie Town Fair and Hot Air Balloon Festival — held annually each summer — fills the skies above Old Town with colorful balloons and draws crowds from across Boulder and Weld Counties. Boo on Briggs Street, the Erie Brewfest, and a year-round farmers market keep the downtown active across all seasons. This is the Erie that its newer residents borrow for their identity, and that its original residents built from scratch.
Central Erie with Easy Boulder and Denver Access
Old Town Erie sits at the geographic and cultural center of the town, with Briggs Street as its commercial spine and Coal Creek Park providing open space immediately adjacent. Erie Parkway connects quickly to I-25 (Exit 232) approximately three miles east, placing downtown Denver about 27 miles south and Boulder about 15 miles west via State Highway 7. The Lafayette Park-and-Ride on US-287 provides RTD bus access for commuters heading into Boulder or Denver, and JUMP Bus Line RTD service provides public transit connections throughout the Boulder-Erie-Lafayette corridor.
Erie Community Center — 63,000 square feet of recreation including an indoor pool, lazy river, climbing wall, gymnasium, and fitness facilities — is a short drive from Old Town. Thomas Reservoir provides fishing and trail walking nearby. Colorado National Golf Club, with its Front Range mountain views, is accessible within Erie’s boundaries. Downtown Erie’s walkable core is genuinely usable on foot, with Briggs Street’s concentration of dining, retail, and services within easy walking distance of most Old Town homes.
Coal Creek Park, Thomas Reservoir, and Erie’s Trail Network
- Coal Creek Park (adjacent to downtown — trails, open space)
- Coal Creek Trail (regional multi-use trail)
- Thomas Reservoir (fishing, walking paths)
- Erie Community Center (63,000 sq ft — pool, lazy river, gym)
- Erie Community Park (splash pad, skate park, pickleball)
- Erie Lake (fishing, picnicking)
- Over 40 miles of Erie recreational trails
- Colorado National Golf Club (mountain views — championship)
- Wise Homestead Museum (1870s — Saturdays)
- Erie Hot Air Balloon Festival (annual summer)
- Erie Town Fair (Briggs Street — annual)
- Erie Farmers Market (seasonal)
Education in Old Town Erie
Old Town Erie is served by the St. Vrain Valley School District — one of Colorado’s most respected public school districts and the primary district for most of Erie. The local school pipeline earns consistently strong marks from independent rating services.
Always verify current school assignments directly with St. Vrain Valley School District before purchasing.
Where Old Town Erie Residents Eat
Briggs Street has become one of the northern Denver corridor’s genuine dining destinations — a concentration of independent, quality restaurants and bars that punches well above its weight for a town of Erie’s size.
Erie’s most acclaimed restaurant — farm-to-table American cuisine with a full bar set against dramatic wooden bookshelves. 24 Carrot has become a regional destination, drawing diners from Boulder and Broomfield who seek it specifically. The definitive Old Town dining experience.
Erie’s most beloved outdoor gathering destination — Stem Ciders’ sprawling patio and full cidery operation at Acreage has become the warm-weather social hub for the whole town. Quality cider, craft beer, food, and the kind of laid-back energy that Colorado’s outdoor culture is known for.
Old Town’s neighborhood specialty coffee shop — the daily pre-work and post-walk coffee stop for Erie’s downtown residents. A genuine neighborhood café rather than a chain.
A seasonal farmers market on Briggs Street bringing local produce, artisan goods, and the community gathering energy that makes Old Town Erie’s downtown feel genuinely alive.
Living in Old Town Erie
Old Town Erie residents will tell you they chose this neighborhood over Erie’s newer master-planned communities for the same reason: character. The mature trees, the walkable downtown, the Hot Air Balloon Festival visible from their front porches — the things that take decades to build, that money can’t manufacture overnight.
The 150-year-old commercial spine of Erie — brick buildings reimagined as farm-to-table restaurants, boutiques, and community spaces, hosting the Erie Town Fair, Boo on Briggs, the Brewfest, and the Farmers Market across the calendar year.
The most visually spectacular annual event in northern Boulder County — hot air balloons filling the skies above Old Town each summer, drawing crowds from across the metro and generating the kind of community pride that newer Erie neighborhoods aspire to.
A comprehensive city recreation facility a short drive from Old Town — indoor pool, lazy river, climbing wall, gymnasium, racquetball, and year-round programming that serves Erie residents of all ages.
The Coal Creek Trail runs through Erie’s open space network, providing cycling and running connections that extend Old Town’s outdoor access well beyond its immediate blocks.
Erie’s championship golf course — a demanding, scenic layout with sweeping Front Range mountain views, accessible within the town boundaries.
Most Old Town homes carry no HOA — combined with mature landscaping, century-old architectural detail, and established lot sizes, this creates the authentic neighborhood character that takes generations to develop and that HOA-governed new communities are still years away from matching.
Homes for Sale in Old Town Erie
Ready to Call Old Town Erie Home?
Old Town Erie offers what no new construction in Erie can replicate — 150-year-old character, walkable Briggs Street, the Hot Air Balloon Festival from your front porch, and homes with the history and authenticity that newer communities are still building toward. Let’s find your home.
