The Park
Originally founded by Fur Traders in 1888, the Hideout Cabins and Campground maintains the original serenity up to this day, while bordering Glenwood Springs with all its amenities and fun. Our 9 acres of grounds are surrounded by rivers and national forest. There is plenty of outdoor fun to be had: hiking, mountain biking, skiing, gold medal waters, hot springs, and more. The Hideout even has two corporate ski passes for Sunlight Mountain, a local ski resort, that park residents can use.
The Hideout offers 42 full hookup RV sites, 15 cabins, and several summer tent sites. Long-term housing and short-term rentals are both available.
Glenwood Springs
Glenwood Springs was home to the indigenous Ute Tribe, for whom the hot springs were sacred. Giving the settlement its name, they are still central to the essential Glenwood experience today. In the past they attracted settlers in the wild west days, who founded Defiance, a settlement with saloons, brothels, cabins and tents in 1883.
Defiance was shortly after renamed Glenwood Springs, became a trading center, and started to attract tourists as early as the late 18th century. President Theodore Roosevelt and Molly Brown vacationed at the Hotel Colorado, today a local historic landmark. Buffalo Bill visited often, and Doc Holliday died at the Glenwood Hotel and still haunts the town’s graveyard every October.
For more information visit:
Visit Glenwood (Visitor Center)
Hideout Map