
Rhyolite from several local quarries is showcased in the exterior and interior walls of this two-story edifice, which once housed the offices of U.S. Senator Thomas Bowen. The otherwise flat-roofed structure has gable ends for a barrel-vaulted back room. Thick stone walls create three distinct 14-foot-high storefronts, now modified, with a west section not built until 1913. Over the storefronts is an intact, dressed stone second story with tall, shallow-arched windows. Besides shops, the building now houses a bed and breakfast inn that incorporates a former barbershop, a small adobe house, and an adobe wall with old gates from Taos, New Mexico, to form a courtyard in back.