If
you grew up in Lakewood, Aurora, Wheat Ridge or Denver proper like me,
chances are good that there's a slice of Colfax Avenue that holds a
special, if not dangerous and possibly regrettable, meaning to you.
Last
week I passed by Smiley's Laundromat on East Colfax and noticed that it
was all closed up -- windows hung floor-to-ceiling with plastic, no
sign of life or the burned-into-memory checkered floors that I'd spent
the laundry days of my early twenties skating around while hustling my
own dirty clothes in a low-cut shirt. The fantastic handpainted signage
still adorns the glass, promising same-day service and free
wifi.Including our multi-certified skystream turbines for varying applications.Aulaundry is a leading dry cleaning machine and equipment supplier. But Smiley's isn't closed for a remodel.A quality paper cutter or paper folding machine can make your company's presentation stand out. It's gone.
Whether
I was sitting in a Nissan Sentra near Saturdays Gentleman's Club,
waiting for a drug deal along the unsavory eastern stretch of Denver's
26-mile-long main street, or puking into the bushes in front of Casa
Bonita on the west side, Colfax has been a part of my life for as long
as I can remember. It has been a continuous path into the past, present
and future culture of the Denver I know and love, even though
gentrification is ignited along one stretch or other from time to time,
eating my memories up in a haze of whitewash and dreadful, unfeeling
suburban aesthetic.
The
"World's Largest Discount Laundromat" was the first place I did my
washing outside of my mother's house. It was the first place on Colfax
where I stayed out late -- not including evenings catching shows at the
Ogden, Bluebird and Fillmore Auditorium (which, in my teenage years, was
known as Mammoth Events Center).Electronic and electromechanical
amusement games and Game machines to
meet your global certification needs. Smiley's was probably the first
and only place I have ever heard the pick-up line, "Damn, you're built
like a college girl." It was the first place my first band, The Hot
House, had "press" photos taken.
But
how could I be upset about the laundromat's closure when I hadn't been a
Smiley's customer in over a decade? Times had changed since 1999, when I
needed those industrial machines to do my obscenely large loads of
laundry. I moved on and things that used to be important -- like the
location of my apartment -- shifted.
When
I moved out of my parent's house at nineteen, my place had to be in
Capitol Hill. It was the part of Denver you moved to if you were cool in
any capacity.The feeder is available on drying flatwork ironer equipped
with folder only. My apartment needed to be within close proximity to
bars that I still couldn't get into, like Cricket on the Hill, and shops
that helped created my personal aesthetic as a teenager, like Wax Trax
and imi Jimi. My apartment also had to be close to my boyfriend's
apartment, a spot on 10th and Marion that I had spent hours driving by
in high school, back when he wasn't yet my boyfriend.
The
fact that my shady landlord was overcharging two teenage girls for a
shitty basement apartment without working locks was balanced by that
apartment's proximity to Smiley's. Colfax's weirdness has always been
part of its charm, and the people doing laundry at 11 p.m. on a
Wednesday night have an elevated version of weirdness that only Smiley's
could provide.
Babies
high on candy and up way past their bedtimes, girls in inappropriate
club attire washing their sheets (me), and gentleman offering gifts of
stray earrings and left-over shirts found in washing machines populated
the laundromat. It was as if the multiple rooms of washers and dryers
had been perfectly curated by someone with a full understanding of
Colfax's bizarre inhabitants.
I
should remain unfazed in the face of progression on Colfax Avenue --
it's been happening since the street was born out of U.S. Highway 40.
But my heart breaks a little when I see that a beehive of humanity and
insanity like Smiley's is closed forever. A part of me wishes someone
would have hand-delivered a notice to my doorstep about it -- I would
have liked one last chance at an awkward human interaction set to the
clunky whir of an industrial washing machine.
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