Last updated: June 22, 2026
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Plan Like A Park Ranger: Visiting Bent's Old Fort
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Leashed pets are welcome in most of the park but are limited to the plaza inside the Fort. Additionally, pets should not be left unattended. Summer heat poses a threat to pets left in vehicles.
The information center is located at the visitor parking area, immediately next to the restrooms and orientation shelter. It provides orientation materials and has a Western National Park Store.
Bent’s Old Fort was completely reconstructed by the National Park Service in 1975-1976, and was dedicated on July 25, 1976. The dedication of the reconstructed fort coincided with America's bicentennial and the centennial of Colorado's statehood. Today it stands as a reminder of how the United States has remembered its past. Rather than preserving a ruin, the project sought to create an immersive, educational experience through a scale model that would make the region’s past tangible and accessible to future generations.
The new fort was built over the foundation of the original fort, and the walls were constructed of a Portland cement brick inner wall and an outer wall of stabilized adobe brick clad in adobe render. This resulted from an effort to reduce immediate and long-term costs and maintenance, by utilizing a mixture of Santa Fe adobe and contemporary masonry design. Over time, stucco was applied over the adobe render before the exterior walls were later “repaired” utilizing concrete block and cement stucco. Because of this hybrid design, special attention was required for structural continuity, finishing, and drainage of the walls and roofs. Other design components of the reconstructed fort consisted of concrete foundation, floors, and roof decks, concrete bond beams, insulation and water proofing, radiant heating, exhausting ventilation, plumbing, lighting, and power. These changes to the design aimed to improve the durability of the new fort, yet quickly led to significant engineering and design failures.
The high cost of maintenance and upkeep of the reconstructed fort in the years after its completion led to a push for finding alternative materials that were more resistant to climatic and structural factors. This legacy of ad hoc repair has further complicated the conditions within the reconstruction.
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Bent's Old Fort is the beginning of a story that stretches across two other national park units in Southeast Colorado and one in Northeast New Mexico. Extend your experience by visiting Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site and Amache National Historic Site, each approximately a one hour drive from Bent's Old Fort. Just across the state line in New Mexico, Capulin Volcano National Monument offers sweeping views and the opportunity to get a close up experience on an extinct volcano.