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Denver Mountain Parks to take over management of Mount Blue Sky road

The continent’s highest paved road expected to open Memorial Day weekend

Hikers walk the Summit Lake trail on Mount Blue Sky in 2023. (Hyoung Chang/Denver Post file)
Hikers walk the Summit Lake trail on Mount Blue Sky in 2023. (Hyoung Chang/Denver Post file)
DENVER, CO - JANUARY 13 : Denver Post's John Meyer on Monday, January 13, 2014.  (Photo By Cyrus McCrimmon/The Denver Post)
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Getting your player ready...

When the Mount Blue Sky Road opens Memorial Day weekend from Echo Lake to the iconic mountain’s 14,266-foot summit, conditions permitting, there will be a change in the way access to the road is managed.

Denver Mountain Parks will staff the welcome station at Echo Lake and manage the Mount Blue Sky Recreation Area, taking over that role from the Arapaho National Forest.

“Managing this complex, high-use recreation area has always been a shared stewardship effort between the national forest, the city of Denver and state of Colorado,” forest supervisor Christopher Stubbs said in a joint news release. “We have been working together on this mountain for more than a century. In the early years, Denver had the greater presence with their (Echo Lake) lodge and restaurants on the mountain. For the past four decades, the forest service has been at the helm. Now itap Denver’s turn again.”

The Mount Blue Sky Road did not open last summer due to a road repair project near Summit Lake. CDOT maintains the highway and plows it in the spring for summer access. More than 100,000 visitors drive the road annually. It typically opens around Memorial Day, after the roadway is clear of snow, and closes on Labor Day.

Denver Mountain Parks will collect fees, manage the reservation system and set operating hours. Reservations are expected to become available on in May.

The cost of entry will be $20 per car and $15 for motorcycles. Bikes and pedestrians will be free.

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