Steve & Kate's Camp - Denver - Lowry
The Logan School for Creative Learning, 1005 Yosemite St., Denver, CO 80230
About
Steve & Kate's Camp - Denver - Lowry offers activities such as coding, sewing, baking, making, sports, filming, lounging, arts and crafts, tabletop games, and building marble mazes and forts. Campers can explore a Media Lab with film, coding, robotics, virtual reality 3D worlds, and interactive art apps, as well as stop-motion animation, hand- and machine-sewing, robotics projects using leading-edge robotic technology, and creating robot landscapes and custom mazes. The camp also includes baking with different fillings, spices, and add-ons, use of custom maker packs and 3D pens, sensory objects, and reading from a thoughtfully stocked bookshelf, along with traditions and special events such as Find Chuckie, Friday Pie-Day, Friday Fashion Show, Monday Magic Show, water tag, inflatable slip n’ slides, a giant sprinkler, go-kart experiences, team-based sports and games, and Sports & Rec where kids can run, jump, throw, kick, and play.
• Ages: 4–12 years old
• Schedule: Summer day camp offered June 8–August 14, 8:00am–6:00pm, closed June 19 and July 3
• Price: All-inclusive rates cover all camp hours (8:00am–6:00pm), snacks and lunch, and any activities that interest the child
Steve & Kate's Camp - Denver - Lowry operates with long camp hours included, and parents can buy any number of days and send their child on any day within the season, with drop-off and pick-up allowed at any time within camp hours. The program offers automatic full refunds for unused purchased Day Passes and partial refunds for underused Summer Passes, and unused days are automatically refunded at summer’s end. Campers choose which activities they do, whom they do them with, and for how long, and campers must be fully toilet trained, able to speak up for their needs, and able to get through the camp day without a nap. Tasty meals and snacks are included, and additional state-required paperwork must be submitted for every child before their first day of camp. As summer approaches, registered families receive a link to a virtual camp orientation with details on local drop-off and pick-up procedures, daily check-in and check-out, what to bring and not bring, and other camp details.
The camp includes S&K traditions such as the Find Chuckie rubber chicken game and Friday Pie-Day, as well as weekly specials that may feature giant inflatables, musical performances, movement workshops, and popup petting zoos. Special events also include a Friday Fashion Show where campers create looks in the Sewing Salon and show them off in a runway show, an interactive magic show by Anne Lincoln, a guided LEGO building workshop, the Team Hero non-competitive sports enrichment program, a Denver Museum of Nature and Science program brought to camp, a Talent Show, and a Field Day with relay races and team-based competitions that emphasize teamwork, strategy, and team spirit. The program states that all year long kids are in rigid structure and that, when summer comes, it gives them freedom to expand and evolve, with campers making their own choices about activities as a kind of training ground for being empowered, independent, resilient, and responsible for their own decisions.
Steve & Kate’s Camp began in 1980 and describes that, at that time, Steve wore denim shorts and Kate wore Reeboks to aerobics, and that the organization has since grown to more than 70 locations from Manhattan to Manhattan Beach. The Denver camp’s director is named Mary. The organization notes that its Colorado camps follow all local water restrictions and conservation requirements and, in partnership with host schools, adjust programming as needed to support safe and responsible camp operations. Steve & Kate’s Camp also offers mentorship programs for children aged 14 and 15, with availability that may vary by location, and runs holiday camps for kids ages 4–12.
Testimonials about Steve & Kate’s Camp include comments from Andrew Stanton, Director of WALL-E, Finding Nemo, and Finding Dory, who says that children at the camp blossom and discover a freedom of identity and that kids find their thumbprint there, and he notes his one complaint is wondering where the camp was when he was a kid. Apple’s Hot News states that if kids ruled the world, it might look something like Steve & Kate’s Camp. Variety magazine notes that the camp did not set out to cater to children of people at Pixar and Industrial Light & Magic, but that, given its philosophy, it is not surprising that many attend. The Washington Post describes Steve & Kate’s Camp as a blend of traditional camp experience with a modern, tech-savvy touch, with a laid-back aura and Silicon Valley-inspired innovative approaches to programming and payment. The Chicago Tribune states that working parents’ worries dissipate as they contemplate Steve & Kate’s model.
Last updated April 30, 2026.
• Ages: 4–12 years old
• Schedule: Summer day camp offered June 8–August 14, 8:00am–6:00pm, closed June 19 and July 3
• Price: All-inclusive rates cover all camp hours (8:00am–6:00pm), snacks and lunch, and any activities that interest the child
Steve & Kate's Camp - Denver - Lowry operates with long camp hours included, and parents can buy any number of days and send their child on any day within the season, with drop-off and pick-up allowed at any time within camp hours. The program offers automatic full refunds for unused purchased Day Passes and partial refunds for underused Summer Passes, and unused days are automatically refunded at summer’s end. Campers choose which activities they do, whom they do them with, and for how long, and campers must be fully toilet trained, able to speak up for their needs, and able to get through the camp day without a nap. Tasty meals and snacks are included, and additional state-required paperwork must be submitted for every child before their first day of camp. As summer approaches, registered families receive a link to a virtual camp orientation with details on local drop-off and pick-up procedures, daily check-in and check-out, what to bring and not bring, and other camp details.
The camp includes S&K traditions such as the Find Chuckie rubber chicken game and Friday Pie-Day, as well as weekly specials that may feature giant inflatables, musical performances, movement workshops, and popup petting zoos. Special events also include a Friday Fashion Show where campers create looks in the Sewing Salon and show them off in a runway show, an interactive magic show by Anne Lincoln, a guided LEGO building workshop, the Team Hero non-competitive sports enrichment program, a Denver Museum of Nature and Science program brought to camp, a Talent Show, and a Field Day with relay races and team-based competitions that emphasize teamwork, strategy, and team spirit. The program states that all year long kids are in rigid structure and that, when summer comes, it gives them freedom to expand and evolve, with campers making their own choices about activities as a kind of training ground for being empowered, independent, resilient, and responsible for their own decisions.
Steve & Kate’s Camp began in 1980 and describes that, at that time, Steve wore denim shorts and Kate wore Reeboks to aerobics, and that the organization has since grown to more than 70 locations from Manhattan to Manhattan Beach. The Denver camp’s director is named Mary. The organization notes that its Colorado camps follow all local water restrictions and conservation requirements and, in partnership with host schools, adjust programming as needed to support safe and responsible camp operations. Steve & Kate’s Camp also offers mentorship programs for children aged 14 and 15, with availability that may vary by location, and runs holiday camps for kids ages 4–12.
Testimonials about Steve & Kate’s Camp include comments from Andrew Stanton, Director of WALL-E, Finding Nemo, and Finding Dory, who says that children at the camp blossom and discover a freedom of identity and that kids find their thumbprint there, and he notes his one complaint is wondering where the camp was when he was a kid. Apple’s Hot News states that if kids ruled the world, it might look something like Steve & Kate’s Camp. Variety magazine notes that the camp did not set out to cater to children of people at Pixar and Industrial Light & Magic, but that, given its philosophy, it is not surprising that many attend. The Washington Post describes Steve & Kate’s Camp as a blend of traditional camp experience with a modern, tech-savvy touch, with a laid-back aura and Silicon Valley-inspired innovative approaches to programming and payment. The Chicago Tribune states that working parents’ worries dissipate as they contemplate Steve & Kate’s model.
Last updated April 30, 2026.