Affordable Meetings

Affordable Meetings

Two Indoor Spaces
First Floor: Parlor
Seating: about 30
Plasma HDTV: 50”
Dry Erase Board: Yes
Restroom: yes
Third Floor: Ballroom
Seating: about 100
Dry Erase Board: Yes
Pull Down Screen? Yes
CD Jukebox? Yes
Turret Break-out room? Yes
Restroom: Mens & Ladies

Booking:
Email: stay@lumberbaron.com
Phone: 303-477-8205
Fax: Call ahead for number

Favorite Caterers:
Bella Basil: 303-860-7006, ask for Sandy
the Food Guy: 303-727-9200, Ask for Cindy
Meeting spaces like no other in Denver
Whether your group has 10 or 100 people, the Lumber Baron Inn and Gardens will make it unique and professional. Our full-service approach lets you focus on your work instead of worrying about the venue and service. We'll help you plan your event and coordinate any special needs. Come for one day – or an entire week! However long your group stays, we’ll take care of everything so you can work – and play!
Facility Specifications
- First floor offers three formal parlor rooms with a capacity of 25 people per room
- Third floor ballroom has a capacity of 100 people
- Outdoor garden area has a capacity of 150 people
- Five elegant suites provides overnight accommodations at corporate rates
- Commercial kitchen serves breakfast, lunch, dinner, meeting breaks and cocktails
- Wired for audio/visual and Internet access
Affordable Services for Your Event
- Pricing: $150 for four hours or less, $275 for four to eight hours (excluding conventions)
- Dining: Breakfast starts at $6/person, lunch at $13/person and dinner at $25/person
- Cocktails: $3 and up for beer and wine, $4 and up for mixed drinks
- Catering: Clients may hire an outside caterer if they choose
- Booking: Rental agreement and deposit required.
Call 303.477.8205 to book your event.
More about the Parlors:
Separated by ten-foot tall pocket doors, the front parlor opens to the back parlor which turns and opens to the dining room, while all three open to the front entry and Grand staircase - all capped with elaborate Bradbury & Bradbury art wallpaper ceilings.
Spacious, with many amenities, including HDTV, live webcam coverage, and a heirloom baby grand piano, the parlor is our most versatile room, especially for wedding ceremonies.
When the National Trust for Historic Preservation awarded the Lumber Baron with the GAHA, they cited the first floor parlors as a primary reason. It's no wonder, considering how rare it is for a Bed & Breakfast to maintain three large open rooms for guest enjoyment.
Separated by ten-foot tall pocket doors, the front parlor opens to the back parlor which turns and opens to the dining room, while all three open to the front entry and Grand staircase - all capped with elaborate Bradbury & Bradbury art wallpaper ceilings.
The front parlor introduces guests to the original owners, John and Amelia Mouat, whose photos flank the fireplace mantle. Their 1890 dream-house design outfitted each room with a different variety of wood - this front parlor features cherry. The rich red tones of cherry frame the massive windows in the turret room home to a Keller family heirloom Baby Grand player piano. Bradbury & Bradbury Neo-Grec wallpaper weaves elements from the classical pattern into carvings in the victorian cherry wood mantle and restored gas fireplace.
As the largest room on the first floor, the back parlor provides both openness and intimacy. Dark purple walls contrast with the golden sparkle of the sycamore trim and restored wide-plank fir flooring. With a 50" Nachamichi plasma HDTV and a spectacular art wallpaper ceiling in the Morris Tradition, the back parlor is our most versatile room. It hosts meetings of 35 or fewer, cocktail parties, wedding ceremonies, bridal and baby showers, wine tastings, Super Bowl parties and countless other events. The dining room bay windows once faced a small orchard on the east side of the house. Browse the colorful stained glass window transoms, rosette carvings above the doors and windows and discover the fruits of the orchard: apples, cherries, plums and grapes. More tropical oranges, lemons, and pomegranates fill out the customized ceiling patter in the Dresser Tradition.
A converted oak bookcase, reportedly salvaged from a monastery, now stores our wine selection. The Grand staircase and front entry hall reveal many secrets to the history of the house. The oak trim above the doors still bears the scars of the home's lengthy apartment era. White vertical lines along the crown molding mark where bathroom walls stood for decades. Birds and cherry blossoms cover the Anglo Japanese-inspired ceiling pattern, mimicked in the massive replicated etched glass window above the front doors. The original 1890 etched window was cracked but reborn in the 1990's as the large shards were cut down into diamond shaped beveled pieces now leaded into the other window in this room at the bottom of the stairs.
Lastly, John Mouat's own native Scottish thistle leaf inspired the carved newel-post top, and his craftsman logo of the encircled 4-pronged leaf found in the other houses he built.
After-work Mixers:
Usually 5pm-8pm: Check our Mixer page for details- click here!