Winery in Denver

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  • Atost

    15801 W. Sixth Ave. Frontage Rd. Golden

    303-862-4996

  • Attimo | Urban Winery

    2246 Larimer St., Denver LoDo/Ballpark/Commons Park

    720-287-4988

    Snooze founder Jon Schlegel opened this Ballpark winery in January 2020 after spending time living in Italy. Italian for "a moment," Attimo offers a peaceful reprieve from the bustle of downtown with wines made from grapes shipped directly from Italy and aged on site.
    1 article
  • Bigsby's Folly

    3563 Wazee St., Denver Five Points/RiNo

    720-485-3158

    In a cavernous brick building that was once a factory, Chad and Marla Yetka built a winery and wine bar named after their departed golden retriever, Bigsby. The wine list at Bigsby's Folly isn't lengthy or built on big-name vintages; instead, you'll find a selection of varietals made from California-grown grapes, some created on site and some crafted at the company's satellite winery in the San Francisco Bay area. A slate of wine-friendly dishes, including flatbreads, sandwiches and antipasto boards, helps round out the experience, so you can judge your favorite food-and-wine pairings before taking home a vintage-labeled bottle or growler filled from the wine tap.
    13 articles
  • Blanchard Family Wines

    1855 Blake St., Suite 120 Downtown Denver

    720-990-9092

    1 article
  • Deep Roots Winery

    2875 Blake St., Denver Five Points/RiNo

    720-328-4786

  • The Infinite Monkey Theorem Urban Winery

    3200 Larimer St., Denver Five Points/RiNo

    303-736-8376

    Ben Parsons has long been a wine-industry renegade, perhaps most notably for his canned wine, which drove Infinite Monkey Theorem to a new level of success and launched something of a packaging sea change among young makers. Just as brazen was planting his winery in the urban core of Denver and tapping into city culture — rather than relying on traditional tasting-room niceties to inform the vibe. In 2012, IMT moved from its original Santa Fe warehouse to its RiNo flagship, which draws from industrial surroundings and continues to sustain a raucous party sensibility. It has since spawned an Aurora location in the Stanley Marketplace and an offshoot in Austin, but it’s hard to beat the patio in RiNo, where fire pits let crowds linger even after summer ends.
    79 articles