Pagosa Springs Colorado
The
Springs Resort: Pagosa being the best it can be!


The Springs Resort has come a long way
in the past ten years, from its previous humble beginnings.
Photoshop Painting by Norm Vance |
In my recent articles about “Pagosa being
the best it can be,” I covered some of the events in the
1980s and early 1990s that vastly improved the downtown area.
I listed the River Restoration Project, the River Walk and other
town projects that inspired private enterprise to follow suit
with improvements.
The greatest of these was the purchase and development of the
riverside hot spring property by partners Bill Dawson and Matt
Mees. Their development of this facility, along with the relocation
and expansion of the Chamber of Commerce, overhauled the south
side of the river’s shore. Before this change, the area
was an eyesore at best.
Recent transplants to Pagosa do not realize the pond isn’t
natural. Matt built the pond, which collects spring water from
a spring vent below the mineral mound and from the mound’s
artificial flow. Before the pond was installed, this wide and
shallow place in the river trapped all sorts of trash from upstream.
Sometimes it was cleaned up—and sometimes not. It was rare
to see a person anywhere on the south river bank.
When Matt and Bill purchased the property, the motel was closed,
as was the restaurant located in the building where Juan’s
Mountain Sports is now. The hot spring facility was a gray wood
open-topped octagon with walls above head level and four fiberglass
hot tubs. The tubs were cracked and crusted over with deposits.
Their first move was to cut the tall walls down to waist level,
after which they constructed a small building housing two showers.
(Continued below...)

The following years saw construction of the pond and additional
hot bath pools. The new baths were made of stone and concrete,
covered inside with a nonporous material required by sanitary
standards. Each year Matt was seen breaking ground and building
another one or two bathing pools.
I had a “special relationship” with this construction
as I was publishing The San Juan Adventure Guide magazine at the
same time. I promoted all things hot springs related, and began
to print two page hand-drawn illustrations of the facility in
the Guide. Each year I had to start all over again to best showcase
the changes made the previous year. Once I thought I would get
ahead of the curve and asked Matt what the next additions would
look like. His blank look back made me realize the new pools and
changes were as much artistic inspiration as exact engineering,
and when I asked he simply didn’t know!
Over the years, pool after pool was added, along with stone
paths, steps and landscaping, including wildly colorful flowers
and trees. (Continued below...)

Photo: Norm Vance
This onetime eyesore soon became a magically beautiful focal
point in downtown Pagosa Springs. During this time a major event
was held here, the $10,000 Yukon Jack Sled Dog Race, drawing television
coverage from ABC’s Wide World of Sports and CBS. For their
final broadcast of the day they set up in the parking area and
used The Springs as a backdrop for their reporter. The sky was
dark, and the illuminated and glowing mineral mound and pools
became the first and only satellite television image to ever be
broadcast from Pagosa Springs.
After the slow development of The Springs pools, the new bathhouse
built a couple of years ago was a dramatic addition. The building
drew many comments, including one observation that the architectural
style used was "Greco-Anasazi!" The 1881 spring bathhouse
had a strong (and likely controversial) design with a steeply
pitched roof and many cupolas with flagpoles, so it is fitting
this building makes as strong a statement as its predecessor.
Now that Matt and Bill have sold the hot spring facility, they
plan to continue developing the adjoining property west and south.
No matter what they do or what people’s attitude about it
is, no one can deny it will likely be a class act. Just like The
Springs Resort, it will be a plus for Pagosa.
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