The full memorial wall at 21st and Lawrence, Denver, community gathered at the October 2020 unveiling

Featured Project • Colorado Street Art Company

KENDRICK CASTILLO
MURAL: A WALL OF
COURAGE & COMPASSION

In downtown Denver, at the corner of 21st and Lawrence, there is a brick wall that stops people in their tracks. On it, Kendrick Castillo looks out over the parking lot with a warm smile, glasses on, suit and tie sharp against a blue sky. The mural is simple at first glance, but anyone who knows Kendrick’s story feels the weight behind it.

Kendrick was eighteen years old when he gave his life protecting classmates during the 2019 STEM School Highlands Ranch shooting. His actions allowed hundreds of other students to go home that night.

The mural in Denver’s Ballpark neighborhood was created to honor that courage and to keep his spirit present in the city he loved. It was unveiled in October 2020 in a LAZ parking lot just a few blocks from Samaritan House--a location chosen with intention. Kendrick cared about people who were struggling, and his parents felt it was fitting that his image would look out on a space where many neighbors in need pass by.

John Castillo speaks at the unveiling of the Kendrick Castillo mural, October 2020, Denver
John Castillo speaks at the October 2020 unveiling • @coloradostart

A Denver Tribute on a Shared Wall

The Kendrick mural is part of a larger wall dedicated to victims of violence and loss. On the same stretch of brick, three other portraits remember people whose lives were cut short, turning the lot into an open-air memorial and a place of reflection rather than just another anonymous urban space.

Colorado Street Art worked closely with Kendrick’s family to make sure the mural reflected who he really was, choosing an image of him smiling against a calm, starry blue background. Colorado Street Art also curated the entire wall, bringing the portraits together into a single, unified tribute to lives taken too soon.

Memorial Wall • 21st & Lawrence • Curated by Colorado Street Art

Kendrick CastilloAdam Clark & Ksenia Poteraj
Mya PenaAustin Zucchini-Fowler
Oluwatoyin “Toyin” SalauGiovannie “Just” Dixon
Paul ChildsKarlee Mariel & Robert Bowers

Curated by Colorado Street Art Company • Presented with support from La Popular Food Company

“Kendrick was spreading love, and always with a smile. What a lot of people don’t realize is, every photograph, we never had to hand pick one that didn’t smile.” -- John Castillo, Kendrick’s father, at the October 2020 unveiling

Painting a Presence, Not Just a Portrait

The mural is large enough that when you stand in the lot, Kendrick feels present rather than distant. The brick texture shows through the paint, giving it a grounded, physical quality. It is not a glossy poster or a banner that could be taken down. It is literally built into the wall.

During the unveiling, Kendrick’s parents stood in front of the mural with community members, friends, and supporters. John spoke about his son’s kindness and quiet strength and shared his hope that people walking by on hard days might look up, see Kendrick’s face, and feel a little less alone.

Close-up of the Kendrick Castillo mural, smiling, glasses, suit and tie, @coloradostart tag visible on the wall
The Kendrick Castillo mural • 2100 Lawrence St, Denver • @coloradostart

Community Response and Living Legacy

The response to the mural has been emotional and ongoing. Former classmates and community members have visited the site, left flowers, taken photos, and shared memories online.

One of Kendrick’s classmates, Lucy Sarkissian, has spoken about how his actions gave her classroom enough time to lock down and stay safe. She later started Cupcakes 4 Change, a cupcake company that supports causes Kendrick cared about, giving his legacy a tangible, everyday impact.

Beyond the wall itself, Colorado communities have honored Kendrick in other ways. Douglas County renamed a stretch of Lucent Boulevard in Highlands Ranch to Kendrick Castillo Way--a reminder woven into the everyday map of the area he called home.

Art as a Stand Against Violence

The wall at 21st and Lawrence is not an easy mural in the sense of subject matter. It asks people to remember violence and loss. But it also stands firmly against that violence by lifting up the people whose lives meant so much more than the moment they were taken.

For Colorado Street Art, murals like this one are about more than paint. They are about telling stories that might otherwise fade into headlines and anniversaries. A wall can become a shrine, a touchstone, a place where grief, gratitude, and hope exist together.

“It is not only about looking back at what happened, but offering comfort in the present.” -- Colorado Street Art Company

Visiting the Mural

If you visit the mural today, you will find it in the LAZ parking lot at 2100 Lawrence Street in Denver’s Ballpark neighborhood, on the edge of Five Points. Cars come and go, games let out nearby, people walk to and from work or the shelters and services in the area. Above all that movement, Kendrick’s smile remains steady.

It is worth taking a moment to stand there, look up at the wall, and say his name.

Kendrick Castillo’s story is one of extraordinary courage, but the mural reminds us that he was also a kind, funny, robot-loving teenager who cared deeply about people. The Denver mural keeps that full picture alive, turning a brick wall into a lasting promise: that his bravery, his love for others, and his memory will not be forgotten.

Visit the Mural

LAZ Parking Lot • 2100 Lawrence Street
Denver, CO 80205 • Ballpark / Five Points neighborhood
CBS Colorado Coverage →

Tags Memorial Wall Denver Five Points Kendrick Castillo Community Mural Adam Clark Giovannie “Just” Dixon Austin Zucchini-Fowler Karlee Mariel Ksenia Poteraj 2020
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