Front Range, easternmost section of the Southern Rocky Mountains in the west-central United States. It extends about 300 miles (500 km) south-southeastward from near Casper in southeastern Wyoming to Fremont county in south-central Colorado. The Front Range is 40 to 50 miles (65 to 80 km) wide and includes the Laramie and Medicine Bow mountains; the Sangre de Cristo Mountains are usually regarded as a southern extension.
Many summits exceed 13,000 feet (4,000 metres), including Grays Peak (14,278 feet [4,352 metres]), which is the range’s highest mountain. Other high peaks include Mount Evans (14,265 feet [4,348 metres]), about 35 miles (55 km) west-southwest of Denver, and Pikes Peak (14,115 feet [4,302 metres]), just west of Colorado Springs; each has a paved road to its summit. Notable passes through the range include Berthoud (11,307 feet [3,446 metres]), near Winter Park; Loveland (11,990 feet [3,655 metres]), just northwest of Grays Peak; and Iceberg (Trail Ridge Road) in Rocky Mountain National Park (12,183 feet [3,713 metres]). The mountains are composed largely of gneiss, schist, and granite.
Lying largely within conservation areas, the Front Range constitutes the whole of Rocky Mountain National Park and occupies portions of Pike, Arapaho, Routt, Roosevelt, and Medicine Bow national forests. The range is known for its variety of minerals and its recreational appeal, and it serves as a source region for headstreams of the Cache la Poudre and Colorado rivers.