Plan Your Visit
Sakura Square is in the Denver Central Business District located at 19th Street and Larimer. Self-parking is available 24/7. The entrance to the parking lot is on Larimer Street with exits on Larimer Street and Lawrence Street.
Sakura Square is in the Denver Central Business District located at 19th Street and Larimer. Self-parking is available 24/7. The entrance to the parking lot is on Larimer Street with exits on Larimer Street and Lawrence Street.
Only credit card payments are accepted. Please see parking signs for instructions on how to pay. Complimentary parking is available for the first 2 hours per day for Sakura Square businesses’ customers with validation.
6 a.m. – 6 p.m.
$4/hour + $0.99/session payment fee
(Daily max: $18)
In after 6.p.m. and out before 6 a.m.
Sunday – Thursday: $7
Friday & Saturday $12
+ $0.99/session payment fee
Sakura Square offers monthly parking and special event parking for Rockies baseball games and other downtown events throughout the year. Please contact [email protected] to inquire about availability or any other questions.
Honoring Sakura Square’s rich cultural history and heritage.
There were Japanese businesses along Larimer for several blocks going into the Red Line neighborhoods of Curtis Park and Five Points. There were approximately 30 Japanese-owned grocery stores in these neighborhoods. Sakura Square block was the center of the Japanese community in Denver.
On Lawrence, there was Granada Fish Market and as you went towards the corner, there was a manju and shave ice shop, and then around the corner there were restaurants, a hotel, service providers and other stores including Pacific Mercantile.
Japanese immigrants developed this block and there is a long history of welcoming newcomers. We practice that at the Temple and at Sakura Square at Cherry Blossom Festival and throughout the year. We provide something at Sakura Square that many in our region might not be familiar with through festivals, religion, culture, food and celebration.
I have a lot of memories of Sakura Square. From a young child to coming back in the early 70s after going away to college. Growing up this was the only area and community where you could see a lot of Japanese American faces. Sakura Square provided a grounding area to connect to my heritage.
Denver was one of the connectors and transition areas for a lot of the people leaving camp after World War II – you had Heart Mountain in Wyoming and Amache in southern Colorado and a lot of people came through Denver going either back to the west coast or through to Chicago and east. My father’s family came to Denver after leaving camp in Rohwer, Arkansas. Having family friends who were in Denver after camp made it easier to resettle in the area.
This November marks 80 years for our family business, Pacific Mercantile. The grocery business is hard and for us, it’s a labor of love in service to the Denver community. I recall my grandfather, father and uncles driving to Sedwick, Rocky Ford, Nebraska and Wyoming to bring fresh farm produce from Japanese growers to Denver.
Inspiring stories of personal memories and deep connections to Sakura Square.
When my parents came to Denver, they lived in the Curtis Park/Five Points neighborhood where along with allowing African American and Mexican American families, Japanese Americans were allowed to live within redlined areas. We were welcomed at the Temple and Sakura Square. The block was a safe haven.
My parents were Japanese immigrants to Peru, my father was kidnapped by the US government from his home in Peru to be held as a hostage during World War II (WWII) and taken to one of the WWII concentration camps in Crystal City, TX. The family was allowed to join him in the camp and they were kept as “illegal aliens” with their passports taken away. After the war, the government intended to deport them to war torn Japan but through legal intervention they were fortunate to be paroled to stay in the U.S. under the sponsorship of a cousin living in Denver.
Like many Japanese American families, it was through family and friends’ connections that we came to Denver after the war. We would come to Temple and run around the block. You would have no worries about leaving the Temple to go to Pacific Mercantile or to just wander around as a kid.
The Temple drew people to services on Sunday and then everybody went shopping afterwards to Pacific or ate lunch at a restaurant. The Temple brought people together and the businesses benefited from people gathering at the Temple.
People connect with Pacific Mercantile. We are a landmark.
My grandfather instilled in us the values of working hard and that customers come first. I remember my grandmother cooking in the old store for our family and employees. She and my grandfather worked hard. It was a big family scene.
Sakura Square has been a very special place to me since I moved to Colorado. I came by myself from Japan without knowing anyone and lived in Tamai Tower when I was in college. Seeing and meeting other Japanese at Sakura Square made me feel at home and safe. Sakura Square is the only bridge that connects me to Japan in Colorado and I have many memories at Sakura Square.
Building a vibrant and sustainable future for generations to come.
Growing up at Sakura Square and the Temple gave me the foundation of who I am and what I do. I want this place to provide the same sense of family and community for generations to come. A vibrant and sustainable future is about honoring those who came before and creating a gathering space for those who come next.
Our community is diverse and founded on the Buddhist teaching, “you are embraced regardless of who you are, so come as you are.”
Sakura Square is a place where in the past families and friends were connected. It's where people stay connected, make new connections and is home for the community. It’s special and like no other place.
The Sakura Square community is multiracial and multiethnic. Sakura Square is a place where the next generation can feel comfortable being from a diverse background. And I think that's what the Temple offers too, a place to find comfort and belonging.
At Tri-State/Denver Buddhist Temple, we value our rich legacy and history. As we prepare for the future, we are practicing a mindset of how we welcome the stranger, embrace change, make new human connections and create new pathways in the Denver community.
It’s gratifying to know that my daughter Alyssa wants to be the 4th generation [owner]. She brings fresh vision and new products from local vendors and a connection to the community while still honoring our past and memories of Grandma and Grandpa to carry on their legacy.
We’re not going anywhere, we will be doing this for another 70 years!