I am interested in what Laramie would have to offer that would cause the town to grow, when it hasn't realistically grown in 70 or 80 years.
- Access to major interstates? Cheyenne has two, Denver has two.
- Access to research university? Denver has a couple, Fort Collins has one, Boulder has one
- Great climate? ...um...yeah....the retirement destination thing ain't happening
- Ski areas - Colorado, Utah each have more accessible mountains and major airports
- Access to major airport? Only with a two hour drive to DIA
- Water? Yeah, but so does Cheyenne, Fort Collins, Denver, Boulder, Colorado Springs
Just ask yourselves the same questions about Kearney or North Platte Nebraska. Hell, Sidney Nebraska has a fortune 500 headquarters (Cabela's) and hasn't really grown either.
Laramie exists because the railroads needed water and a place to build an ice house on the west side of the mountains for it's steam locomotives and refrigeration. Once trains switched to diesel and stopped using ice for refrigeration, the only thing that has kept Laramie alive is a 125 year old decision to put a University there. Cheyenne had the major rail yard in addition to the Capital, then got the I-25/I-80 intersection in the 1950s. All I-80 got Laramie was a convenient bypass. Denver used to be a second city to Cheyenne until BN decided to put their yard there and a big silver boom made it more convenient for people like Horace Tabor to live there.
- Access to major interstates? Cheyenne has two, Denver has two.
- Access to research university? Denver has a couple, Fort Collins has one, Boulder has one
- Great climate? ...um...yeah....the retirement destination thing ain't happening
- Ski areas - Colorado, Utah each have more accessible mountains and major airports
- Access to major airport? Only with a two hour drive to DIA
- Water? Yeah, but so does Cheyenne, Fort Collins, Denver, Boulder, Colorado Springs
Just ask yourselves the same questions about Kearney or North Platte Nebraska. Hell, Sidney Nebraska has a fortune 500 headquarters (Cabela's) and hasn't really grown either.
Laramie exists because the railroads needed water and a place to build an ice house on the west side of the mountains for it's steam locomotives and refrigeration. Once trains switched to diesel and stopped using ice for refrigeration, the only thing that has kept Laramie alive is a 125 year old decision to put a University there. Cheyenne had the major rail yard in addition to the Capital, then got the I-25/I-80 intersection in the 1950s. All I-80 got Laramie was a convenient bypass. Denver used to be a second city to Cheyenne until BN decided to put their yard there and a big silver boom made it more convenient for people like Horace Tabor to live there.