Sticky Header · 3-level mega menu
Prospector Square
Hero · Single image, editorial overlay

Vol. XLIII · Park City

The neighborhood
at the corner
of Bonanza & Park.

Sixty-plus locally-owned shops, restaurants, and services. A community a generation in the making, kept current by the people who live here.

Editorial Intro Block

A note from the neighborhood

Prospector Square has been Park City's working neighborhood for forty years. Locals come for coffee, work meetings, dog walks, and the kind of restaurants you can wear boots to.

Featured Story · Large editorial format
Featured Photograph

Story No. 14

Forty years of Bonanza Drive, told by the people who built it.

Margie opened Bonanza Books in 1986 because the only other bookstore in town closed and "you can't have a real town without a real bookstore." Forty years later her daughter is the buyer. We sat down with three founders.

Read the Story
Featured Members · Editorial 3-up

Directory

Members in focus

B

Independent Bookshop

Bonanza Books

A real bookstore with handwritten staff picks and a resident cat named Hemingway.

Visit profile
S

Restaurant

Square Bistro

Mountain comfort food and the patio that catches the afternoon sun.

Visit profile
P

Café & Roastery

Park City Roasters

Single-origin pours, weekly cuppings, and the friendliest barista on Bonanza.

Visit profile
Image + Text Split · Asymmetric

Plan your visit

A village inside a town.

Free parking, a pedestrian-friendly layout, and most of the businesses you'll need within a two-block walk. Park once, stay all afternoon.

  • 01 Three blocks from the Park City Transit Center.
  • 02 Free parking, never timed, never towed.
  • 03 Year-round events: farmers markets, music nights, holiday lighting.
Editorial Photograph
Image Gallery · Masonry · Lightbox

Gallery

Around the Square

Quote · Testimonial

"There's no other place in Park City quite like Prospector Square. It's where the town gets its coffee, picks up its dry cleaning, and meets its friends. The new site finally feels like that."

Margie Lin · Founder, Bonanza Books · PSOA Board
Article · Rich text kitchen sink

Concept 02 · The Proposal

Refined Heritage: a quieter, more considered Square.

This concept keeps the spirit of your original colors but recasts them as something more grown-up. The navy gets deeper, the orange softens to a terracotta, and a sage-green secondary opens up space for editorial photography. Inspired by historicparkcityutah.com, the layout breathes: large serif headlines, asymmetric blocks, and generous whitespace that lets local stories lead.

What's distinct about this concept

  • Editorial-first. Presents the Square the way a magazine would — stories, not specs.
  • Photography-led. Designed to look its best with great photos — budget time for a local shoot.
  • Asymmetric layouts. Less rigid than a 12-col grid; more unique to Prospector Square.
  • Same family of colors. Locals will still recognize the palette — just refined.

Components included

  1. Sticky header with three-level mega menu
  2. Single-image editorial hero with overlaid title
  3. Editorial Intro Block (centered statement)
  4. Featured Story (large-format image + headline + excerpt)
  5. Featured Members (3-up editorial tile grid)
  6. Image + Text split (asymmetric, alternating)
  7. Image Gallery (masonry layout with lightbox)
  8. Quote / Testimonial block
  9. Rich-text article block (this one) with drop caps and pull quotes
  10. CTA Banner
  11. Member login + auth flow
  12. Footer with newsletter signup

A note on the rich-text editor

Your editors get the full toolkit — headings, lists, blockquotes, bold, italic, links, and inline code — plus drop caps and pull quotes for editorial pieces. Articles can stand alone or live inside the page builder.

CTA Banner

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