Golden Dentist logo
Golden Dentist family
Adler Dentistry
1810 30th St.
Boulder - CO 80301
Ph: 303-449-1119
Fax: 303-449-1914
www.adlerdentistry.com
Why Dr. Adler | Services | Top Dental Technologies | Question Your Dentist | Smile Gallery | Patients Talk | FAQs | Case Studies

 

One Visit Crowns

Invisible Braces

Whitening

Implants

TMJ NeuroMuscular

Cosmetic Dentistry

Safe X-Rays

Laser Scanning

 

Golden Dentist – Michael Adler DDS

Golden Dentist

Golden, Colorado area residents in search of a dentist may find it to their advantage to look to nearby Boulder. Many Golden, CO residents make the short drive to Boulder for work, shopping, or recreation and find it convenient to combine visits to include dental appointments. Dr. Michael Adler’s dental practice, known as Adler Cosmetic & Family Dentistry, is among the top dental practices in the state of Colorado. Located in the nearby community of Boulder the dental office of Dr. Michael Adler provides services to Golden area residents. Adler Cosmetic and Family Dentistry is conveniently located on 30th Street across from the Twenty Ninth Street shopping and entertainment area.

golden dentist image

Prospective and current patients of Dr. Adler will be interested to know that in 2009 he was awarded a Fellowship from the nationally known Las Vegas Institute for Advanced Dental Studies (LVI). Knowing that your dentist has received advanced training at LVI provides an extra measure of confidence and assurance. For patients considering dentistry services it’s so important that your dentist has made the commitment of time and energy to receive advanced training. Dental school alone may be regarded as just a foundation for dentists to continue their training.

Dr. Adler’s LVI training has reached the level of an LVI Fellowship. To achieve this distinction Dr. Adler completed a series of advanced studies. An LVI Fellowship is awarded only to select doctors who successfully complete studies and a comprehensive exam covering the skills and techniques taught at LVI.

In attaining this level of distinction Dr. Adler has made a commitment to offering a high level of Aesthetic Neuromuscular Dentistry. Neuromuscular dentistry is evaluation/diagnosis, and healing of the relationship between teeth, jaw joints, jaw posture, head muscles, neck muscles, back muscles, head posture, and body posture. These factors combine to impact a person’s bite and can cause a variety of symptoms affecting long term health and well being.

For additional information we invite current and new patients to contact our office at (303) 449-1119. Appointments for treatment or consultations are also available. Adler Cosmetic and Family Dentistry is conveniently located on 30th Street across from the Twenty Ninth Street shopping and entertainment area.

About Adler Cosmetic and Family Dentistry
The cosmetic and family dental practice of Dr. Michael Adler is based in the Colorado community of Boulder, a convenient and scenic drive from most locations in the Denver and Front Range areas. Boulder, Colorado is also an inviting destination location for visiting out-of-state patients seeking Dr. Adler’s specialized attention. Dr. Adler is nationally recognized for his work and is committed to providing his patients with the highest level of care in both cosmetic and family dentistry. The practice maintains a website at www.adlerdentistry.com and regularly publishes information on its blog at www.adlerdentistry.com/blog.

Adler Cosmetic and Family Dentistry
1810 30th Street
Boulder, CO 80301
Phone: (303) 449-1119

 

About Golden, Colorado
The historic City of Golden is a Home Rule Municipality that is the county seat of Jefferson County, Colorado, United States. Golden lies along Clear Creek at the eastern edge of the foothills of the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains. Founded during the Pike's Peak Gold Rush on 16 June 1859, the mining camp was originally named Golden City in honor of Thomas L. Golden. Golden City served as the capital of the provisional Territory of Jefferson from 1860 to 1861, and capital of the official Territory of Colorado from 1862 to 1867. In 1867, the territorial capital was moved about 15 miles (24 km) east to Denver City. The United States Census Bureau estimates that the city population was 17,366 in 2005.
The Colorado School of Mines, offering programs in engineering and science, is located in Golden. Also there are the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, the Coors Brewing Company, CoorsTek, the American Mountaineering Center, and the Colorado Railroad Museum. It is the birthplace of the Jolly Rancher, a candy bought out by the Hershey Foods Corporation. Famous western showman William F. "Buffalo Bill" Cody is buried nearby on Lookout Mountain.

golden colorado image

Established as a gold rush town, Golden quickly became a leading economic and political center of the region, being a center of trade between the gold fields and the east, a crossroads and gateway of important roads leading to the mountains, and a center of area industry. By the close of 1860, Golden City had been popularly elected the seat of Jefferson County and was capital of the provisional Jefferson Territory. While the town lost much of its populace and leading citizenry during the American Civil War for several reasons ranging from military to economic, Golden became capital of the federally recognized Colorado Territory in 1862, continuing as such until 1867. Golden became the "Lowell of the West", a regional center of trade and industry that boasted at certain points in time three flour mills, five smelters, the first railroad into the Colorado mountains, the Coors Brewery, brick works, the only paper mill west of Missouri, clay and coal mines, and more. During the 1870s it became home to three institutions of higher education, the Colorado University Schools of which the Colorado School of Mines remains today. Golden was also home to an opera house and seven churches including Colorado's third (Methodist) church, oldest Baptist church, likely oldest Christian (Disciples of Christ) church, and first Swedish immigrant (Lutheran) church. The town was home to sizable populations of German, Swedish, Italian and Chinese immigrants; five immigrants became mayors of Golden.

Until the early 20th century Golden maintained a small town population of around 2,500 people. Several industries faded or were destroyed by tragic events, but others flourished to continue Golden's industrial legacy including its brewing, brickmaking, clay mining and porcelain industries. Golden became even more connected through mass transit, with two trolley lines extending to Denver, while the movie theater gradually took the place of the opera house for downtown entertainment. Downtown revitalization efforts began in the 1920s with its first streetscape and ornamental lighting project and urban renewal on its north and east, anchored by new senior high and grade schools. The historic cultural tension between the city's north and south sides gradually eased, and the town successfully endured additional major economic depressions including the Silver Crash of 1893 and the Great Depression. The School of Mines gained a worldwide academic reputation, Coors rapidly came to the forefront of the national and international brewing and ceramics industries, and the city modernized with a recreation center, paved streets and more.

After World War II Golden boomed, rapidly gaining population, size and economy. In 1959 the town nearly tripled in geographic size overnight when it annexed large properties to the south including the new Magic Mountain theme park, one of the earliest entertainment attractions of its kind. A number of new subdivisions were built and public infrastructure was modernized including new buildings for the senior high school, city hall, recreation center, library, museum and central fire and police stations. Also built were new downtown anchors including department stores and grocery stores, several new church buildings, new county offices, and the Horizon Plan which transformed the School of Mines. The Oil Crash and near simultaneous failure of several downtown anchors placed its central business district into recession by the 1980s, and the downtown was revitalized again through various initiatives including its second streetscaping project in 1992. In 1993 the old Golden High School building was converted into the American Mountaineering Center making Golden a premier research and education hub for mountaineering. The Coors Brewery had become the largest single site brewery in the world, its Porcelain subsidiary among the foremost of its kind in the world, and Golden became home to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. Today Golden has a population of around 18,000 people and is home to more people and businesses of national and international influence than ever before, yet maintains a small town historic identity all its own. Golden information source: Wikipedia.org

 

Golden Dentist | Dentists Golden CO | Golden CO Dentist | Golden Colorado Dentist