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Posted

Today, a letter to the editor of the Daily Aspen News...

‘Owl wall’ decision the best of both worlds

 

Editor:

As a seasonal resident of Aspen since 1958, I am extremely familiar with the importance of Aspen’s history to its sense of place and the continuing evolution of its physical form and function.

As an architect with experience and awards in restoration of Federalist brick structures, I was not surprised to hear that the wall with the Owl Cigar sign at the Crystal Palace had become unstable. Old unsealed brick walls deteriorate, lose grout or have unstable foundations and are very vulnerable to soil irregularities and earthquakes.  

Although the Owl Cigar sign is important in Aspen’s history, it can be moved. Urbanistically, as an urban designer, I would say that the priority should definitely be to allow the move of the signage in order to provide a corner window of glass, rather than brick, and bring light, transparency and activity to that important pedestrian intersection of the city of Aspen.

The Historic Preservation Commission’s decision represents the best of both worlds.

Sherrie S. Cutler

Boston, Massachusetts

Source: https://www.fohcigars.com/forum/topic/160418-up-against-the-owl-cigar-wall/

  • 1 year later...
Posted

Owl Cigar Mural on Crystal Palace demolished last week

Brick and foundation to be preserved for a smaller recreation on the new building at a later date

News - Nov 6, 2025, Colin Suszynski

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The historic Owl Cigar Mural is no longer there as seen on Monday, Nov. 3, 2025. River Stingray/The Aspen Times

The Owl Cigar Mural on the west wall of the historic Crystal Palace Building in downtown Aspen was demolished last week. 

The building was built in 1891 as a wholesale produce house, operating as a place where goods were traded at wholesale prices throughout the early 1900s. One of the goods sold in the building, according to Aspen Historical Society, was the White Owl Cigar, the inspiration for the advertisement painted on the exterior. 

Over the years, the building changed hands and purposes multiple times. The building eventually received a historical designation in 1981, as did the wall, separately. The planned development of the Crystal Palace began in 2017 but was beset with delays.

The wall became the subject of a preservation battle between Mark Hunt — the owner of the building by way of his development firm, M Development — and individuals who believed the mural to be a piece of history in need of preservation, namely members of the Historic Preservation Commission and other members of the public. Ultimately, however, the HPC decided to allow Hunt to proceed without a full preservation of the wall. 

In a 4-3 split decision in October 2024, the HPC commissioners gave Hunt the go-ahead to demolish and relocate the mural using salvaged brick from the demolition. This followed a presentation from representatives from BendonAdams, a planning firm representing the building, to the HPC in October 2024 about difficulties they were having with preserving the wall, asking for an amendment to their preservation agreement. 

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The west wall of the former Crystal Palace building in Aspen in 2024. Ray K. Erku/The Aspen Times archives

“The updated proposal requested the relocation of the mural to the center of the wall,” Historic Preservation Officer Gillian White said in an email. “Which included the disposal of the painted brick and the repainting of the mural on previously unpainted brick in its new location, albeit at a smaller scale.”

BendonAdams representatives argued at the time that the wall was not structurally sound. That, in conjunction with the wall being considered an environmental hazard due to lead paint in the mural and the historicity of the building getting called into question due to new materials found in the wall that suggested the building had been restored substantially various times as the building changed hands, led to the HPC split decision.

The final board decision allowed a downsizing re-creation of the mural in a more central location of the west wall. The demolition last week represents the first step toward that goal. 

“The developer has dismantled, cleaned, and stored these historic bricks until it is time to rebuild the mural,” White said. “The developer has also salvaged some of the foundation stone to be reused with the new building.”

Source: https://www.aspentimes.com/news/owl-cigar-mural-on-crystal-palace-demolished-last-week/

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